Monday, August 2, 2010

Half-Rack at the Rendezvouz

by William Notter

She had a truck, red hair,
and freckled knees and took me all the way
to Memphis after work for barbecue.
We moaned and grunted over plates of ribs
and sweet iced tea, even in a room of strangers,
gnawing the hickory char, the slow
smoked meat peeling off the bones,
and finally the bones. We slurped
grease and dry-rub spice from our fingers,
then finished with blackberry cobbler
that stained her lips and tongue.

All the trees were throwing fireworks
of blossom, the air was thick
with pollen and the brand-new smell of leaves.
We drove back roads in the watermelon dusk,
then tangled around each other, delirious
as honeybees working wisteria.
I could blame it all on cinnamon hair,
or the sap rising, the overflow of spring,
but it was those ribs that started everything.

"Half-Rack at the Rendezvouz" by William Notter, from Holding Everything Down. © Crab Orchard Review & Southern Illinois University Press, 2009. Reprinted with permission.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Mexico

by Robert Hass

I have just crossed the Rio Grande,


And by a string of clever switchbacks


Have, for the moment, outwitted the posse.



Ahead lie the ghosts of Sierra Madre.


Behind, I have nothing but sun,


While the condor's shadow circles over my bones.


Though the mountains are steep, my horse doesn't falter,


And now I know why starving bandoleros

Will never shoot their animals for food.



Beyond my mirage, I see the white adobe—


Yes, the one with the red-tiled roof—


Which one afternoon I will lean against, with my hat down


And knees up, after a bottle of tequila.



In that siesta, I am sure to dream
Of the lovely senorita


Who has stolen away from her father


To meet me in the orchard.



But enough of that. There is work to be done.


I have cattle to rustle and horses to steal


Before the posse picks up my trail.


(In a poem of Mexico, it would be unwise
For a poet to mention the posse is his wife.)



So, mi amigo, if you find her


Prowling my mountains


With a wooden spoon in her hand,


Tell her I am not here.


Tell her I have run off
With Cormac McCarthy and Louis L'Amour,

That I ride like the wind


To join up with the great Pancho Villa.

"Mexico" by Robert Hass, from Counting Thunder. © David Robert Books, 2008. Reprinted with permission.