--Ted KooserThe gravel road rides with a slow gallopover the fields, the telephone linesstreaming behind, its billow of dustfull of the sparks of redwing blackbirds.On either side, those dear old ladies,the loosening barns, their little windowsdulled by cataracts of hay and cobwebshide broken tractors under their skirts.So this is Nebraska. A Sundayafternoon; July. Driving alongwith your hand out squeezing the air,a meadowlark waiting on every post.Behind a shelterbelt of cedars,top-deep in hollyhocks, pollen and bees,a pickup kicks its fenders offand settles back to read the clouds.You feel like that; you feel like lettingyour tires go flat, like letting the micebuild a nest in your muffler, like beingno more than a truck in the weeds,clucking with chickens or sticky with honeyor holding a skinny old man in your lapwhile he watches the road, waitingfor someone to wave to. You feel likewaving. You feel like stopping the carand dancing around on the road. You waveinstead and leave your hand out glidinglarklike over the wheat, over the houses.
2024-07-07
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