IN ART ROWANBERRY’S BARN

In Art Rowanberry’s barn, when Art’s death

had become quietly a fact among

the other facts, Andy Catlett found

a jacket made of the top half

of a pair of coveralls after

the legs wore out, for Art

never wasted anything.

Andy found a careful box made

of woodscraps with a strap

for a handle; it contained

a handful of small nails

wrapped in a piece of newspaper,

several large nails, several

rusty bolts with nuts and washers,

some old harness buckles

and rings, rusty but usable,

several small metal boxes, empty,

and three hickory nuts

hollowed out by mice.

And all of these things Andy

put back where they had been,

for time and the world and other people

to dispense with as they might,

but not by him to be disprized.

This long putting away

of things maybe useful was not all

of Art’s care-taking; he cared

for creatures also, every day

leaving his tracks in dust, mud,

or snow as he went about

looking after his stock, or gave

strength to lighten a neighbor’s work.

Andy found a bridle made

of several lengths of baling twine

knotted to a rusty bit,

an old set of chain harness,

four horseshoes of different sizes,

and three hammerstones picked up

from the opened furrow on days

now as perfectly forgotten

as the days when they were lost.

He found a good farrier’s knife,

an awl, a key to a lock

that would no longer open.