--Maurice ManningWell, this is nothing new, nothingto rattle the rafters in the noggin,this moment of rememberingand its kissing cousin the waking dream.I wonder if I'll remember it?I've had a vision of a womanreclining underneath a tree:she's about half naked and little by littleI'm sprinkling her burial moundswith grass. This is the kind of workI like. It lets me remember, and soI do. I remember the time I laidmy homemade banjo in the fireand let it burn. There was nothing elseto burn and the house was cold;the cigar box curled inside the flames.But the burst of heat was over soon,and once the little roar was done,I could hear the raindrops plopping upthe buckets and kettles, scattered outlike little ponds around the room.It was night and I was a boy, aloneand left to listen to that old music.I liked it. I've liked it ever since.I loved the helpless people I loved.That's what a little boy will do,but a grown man will turn it allto sadness and let it soak his heartuntil he wrings it out and dreamsabout another kind of love,some afternoon beneath a tree.Burial mounds—that's hilarious.
2024-10-21
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