A poem for my sons when the day is too much or not enough
Basket of Peaches, by Joseph Decker, 1885, oil on canvas
The checker at Walmart this morning
thinks the winter weather’s been bipolar.
Record highs one week, then lows in the 20s.
Our little maple started to bud
in mid-February, she says. A hard freeze
has made it sad now, she says. A local
landscaper, a buddy of mine, I tell
her, knows the trees are tough around here.
They’ll be fine, he says. It’s not like
we’re growing peaches anymore
or nothin’, I remind her and leave.
But it’s hard considering an Arkansas summer
without peaches, even spotted ones
like Decker gives us, half-dumped, upset
from a bucket—the kind, if we couldn’t eat,
we’d use for batting practice; the kind,
not spotted and pocked by disease, the old
ladies would turn into cobbler and the old men
would mix with cranked ice cream; the kind
that might entice an oriole or two to lounge
on a fence post and maybe talk a bit about
the fickleness of the coming spring weather.