Bucophilia
It's still dark at 7 a.m., a cold inky blackness that does not invite exploration. Leafless trees, downed branches littering the yard, a sky just light enough to promise hope.
It is a season that calls for poetry (as if all seasons didn't). So I return from the library my arms full of Donald Hall, Jane Kenyon, Maxine Kumin.
This morning, Kumin makes me smile:
Bucophilia — it's a word I'll take into the day.
It is a season that calls for poetry (as if all seasons didn't). So I return from the library my arms full of Donald Hall, Jane Kenyon, Maxine Kumin.
This morning, Kumin makes me smile:
Bucophilia, I call it —
nostalgia over a pastoral vista —
where for all I know the farmer
who owns it or rents it just told his
wife he'd kill her if she left him, and
she did and he did and now here come
the auctioneers, the serious bidders
and an ant-train of gawking onlookers.
Bucophilia — it's a word I'll take into the day.
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