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Charles Halsted Poem
Saturday Farmers’ Market
Here’s how it goes at our Farmers’ Market:
shoppers all ages, clothing, and races,
parents push bundled babies in strollers,
children dash eagerly through the crowd.
Others meander to and fro, seeking
new food and old faces they know.
At the top are the hucksters and politicians
handing out stickers, buttons, petitions.
There’s music: guitars, banjos, accordions,
fiddlers, and a guy playing a digeridoo.
There’s lines for coffee, authentic Peruvian;
for fresh-baked bread: ciabatta, focaccia;
for pasta: fettuccini, tagliatelle, agnolotti, maccheroni,
chitarra; for cheese: Locarno, cheddar, gouda, and brie.
There’s heirloom tomatoes, bok choy, lettuce, kale,
Swiss chard, Satsuma mandarins, Fuyu persimmons,
just-ripened peaches, nectarines, pears,
fresh strawberries, blueberries, plums,
just-caught mackerel, salmon, sole,
a homeless guy peddling his Sparechanger rag.
There’s just-caught mackerel, salmon, sole,
fresh strawberries, blueberries, plums,
just-ripened peaches, nectarines, pears,
Swiss chard, satsuma oranges, and fuyu persimmons.
There’s heirloom tomatoes, bok choy, lettuce, kale;
cheese: locarno, cheddar, gouda, brie;
pasta: fettuccini, tagliatelle, agnolotti, maccheroni, chitarra;
and fresh-baked bread: ciabatta, focaccia.
There’s lines for coffee, authentic Peruvian,
and music: fiddlers, a guy playing a digeridoo,
guitar, banjo, and accordion players.
At the top, handing out stickers, buttons,
petitions are hucksters and politicians.
Seeking new food and old faces they know
are others meandering to and fro.
Children dash eagerly through the crowd, their
parents push bundled babies in strollers.
With shoppers all ages, clothing, and races,
that’s how it goes at our Farmers’ Market.
Copyright © Charles Halsted | Year Posted 2018
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Details |
Charles Halsted Poem
Bend in the River
My friend the squirrel sits on a tree branch, peers
though my window in late afternoon to be certain
I’m still alive. I’m preparing to start my journey
down the river as it begins to round its final bend.
Upstream, it still flows past our first house
where I carried each of you in my womb more than
sixty-five years ago. Later, I made sure that none
of us would starve from lack of eggs or milk
from the chickens and goats we kept behind our house
when your Pa was away in World War II.
Now you’re all here to take turns at the word games
I love, though now I lose more than I win. I’ve long
forgiven your hurts as you have mine. You’ve all
come here to hold me close as my end draws near.
I ask my elder son, “Am I one hundred yet?”
“Five months to go,” he replies. “Good enough,” I say.
When I close my eyes, I’ll float down the river.
Once past its bend, I’ll enter the harbor and sea, become
one with eternal waves crashing against the rocky shore.
Copyright © Charles Halsted | Year Posted 2019
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