The Bush-Hog
Full-speed’s ten, maybe fifteen, but can’t think
about that or the creeping bumper-to-bumper
build-up behind me, two-handing the wheel
half-composed in its puny bucket seat,
so to stay hugging the curb another couple
hundred yards farther down Wards Corner Road
to the pasture’s mouth, a loose-hinged fence-gate
that’ll need pushed in against the heavy
brush, goddamn thick enough to prop the door
up on its own. Remounting the tractor in one
full vault, sweltering rectangle of chore
ahead, snug again between two massive
tires that have the ability to exalt
the farmhand, I reach down for the lever
that in the short course of pulling up on, shudders
and activates the hog. Guttural grind and wisp
of pulverized turf is how to know you’re alive,
ready to stand on the clutch, throw the gears
and carve a single stripe the length, but brake
now to look back. What it is is reward
of doing, beside the yet undone, and to coast
along on the savory air of gasoline.
©TEH