Poems

February 2000

Little porch at night

by Gibbons Ruark

Pull up a porch chair next to this chaise longue.
Tell me the empty dark will fill with voices
And talk to me before I end my song.

  

A summer night, and something has gone wrong
To rob the mild air of familiar faces.
Pull up a porch chair. Next to this chaise longue

  

A mother should be standing with her long
Hair tucked into a bun. Unwind those tresses
And talk to me before I end my song.

  

That vacant angle where a hammock hung
Adopts the whole moon in its loneliness.
Pull up a porch chair. Next to this chaise longue.

  

Summon the fireflies, matches struck and gone,
The Morse code of the stars who’ve lost their places,
And talk to me before I end my song,

  

For down there in the shallows should be strung
A taut line from a father to the sea he fishes.

Gibbons Ruark


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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 18 February 2000, on page 29

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