Reginald Gibbons |
Wood
for Maxine Kumin
A cylinder of maple
set in place, feet spread apart—
and the heavy maul, fat as a hammer
but honed like an axe, draws
a semicircle overhead and strikes
through the two new halves
to leave the steel head sunk
a half-inch in the block and the ash
handle rigid in the air.
A smack of the palm, gripping as it hits
the butt end, and the blade
rolls out of the cut. The half-logs
are still rocking on the flagstones.
So much less than what we have been
persuaded to dream, this necessity for wood
might have sufficed, but it is what
we have been taught to disown and forget.
Yet just such hardship is what saves.
For if the stacked cords
speak of felled trees, of countless
five-foot logs flipped end over end downhill
till the blood is wrung from your back
and snowbound warmth must seem
so far off you would rather freeze,
yet each thin tongue torn from the grain
when log-halves were sundered at one stroke
will sing in the stove.
To remind you of hands. Of how
mere touch is song in the silence
where hands live—the song of muddy bark,
the song of sawdust like cornmeal and down,
and the song of one hand over another,
two of us holding the last length of the log
in the sawbuck as inches away the chainsaw
keeps ripping through hickory.
Reginald Gibbons
The hardship that saves. Interesting. We endure the cold and work so we enjoy the warmth (and the singing). I like how Gibbons describes the woodsplitter in action, there is something so innate about getting wood together for winter. That line "to remind you of hands" is so true. Just as a meal reminds you of the hands that planted, that gathered, that prepared - the woodpile and the woodbox, and the fire itself, always leads back to hands. "Mere touch is song in the silence where hands live", how wonderful - the logs singing in the stove, and touch as song in silence. Gibbons has brought together so many things together and joined them in this poem - work, wood, cold, preparation for hardship, warmth, singing, silence, hands, touch - it's lovely. The kind of poem that grows each time I read it. "The song of one hand over another."
The hardship that saves. Interesting. We endure the cold and work so we enjoy the warmth (and the singing). I like how Gibbons describes the woodsplitter in action, there is something so innate about getting wood together for winter. That line "to remind you of hands" is so true. Just as a meal reminds you of the hands that planted, that gathered, that prepared - the woodpile and the woodbox, and the fire itself, always leads back to hands. "Mere touch is song in the silence where hands live", how wonderful - the logs singing in the stove, and touch as song in silence. Gibbons has brought together so many things together and joined them in this poem - work, wood, cold, preparation for hardship, warmth, singing, silence, hands, touch - it's lovely. The kind of poem that grows each time I read it. "The song of one hand over another."
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