by Diane Glancy
This prairie holds us
with its plainness.
An ugly wife.
We would not stay but children comfort us
and we need this flatness.
On our table
a carp with a tumor
on its lip,
larva eating its side.
An old man laughs,
one silver tooth
in his head
like a galvanized
watertank.
We are driven back
into the land,
our raccoon faces
banded around the eyes
with motorcycle goggles.
Every car we had
rusting in the yard.
We saddle the buffalo
and say we are captives.
This barrenness holds
us down like a wife.
From:
Offering: Poetry & Prose
Copyright ©:
1988, Holy Cow! Press
Last updated March 31, 2023