Dulcimer

The dulcimer sings from fretted maple throat

Of the doe’s swift poise, the fox’s fleeting step

And music of hounds upon the outward slope

Stirring the night, drumming the ridge-strewn way,

The anvil’s strength . . .

and the silence after

That aches and cries unhushed into the day.

From the dulcimer’s breast sound hunting horns

Strong as clenched hands upon the edge of death,

The creak of saddle-bags, of oxen yoke and thongs,

Wild turkey’s treble, dark sudden flight of crows,

Of unshod hoofs . . .

and the stillness after,

Bitter as salt drenching the tongue of pain:

And of the lambs crying, breath of the lark,

Long drinks from piggins hard against the lips;

And with hoarse singing, raw as hickory shagbark,

The foal’s anxiety is woven with the straining wedge

And the wasp’s anger . . .

and the quiet after

For the carver of maple on a keen blade’s edge.