Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Ravelings
Painting by Susan Logan
Ravelings
I still hear sounds
in quiet thoughts
like treadles clacking
at the base of mother's loom,
just as when I sat still
and though small
watched the whoosh
from shuttle sliding
across the warp; color
bumping up against color
and changing with each clack,
changing summer into fall.
In October the abundant
field comes undone;
no longer wild yellow from butter
cups or golden rod. There are only gray
and rust threads not quite holding
together in wind. Very fine snow
will gather heaviness and crack
the straw eventually. Thaw water
moves down with its bits
of passing years. Blue Jays snap
at the feeder and I remember
the way the warp was fed through
the loom's harness where the lengths
of fiber hung waiting for a unity
her hair woven with my blonde, her
patterns, our rhythms. I still tap my foot.
Linda Hogan
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