The Basics of Building. The Poetry of Robert Morgan
Doorknobs
The coolness of the porcelain
and metal thrills the hand. The knob
presses the most tender part of
the palm. Some are like bulbs that light
the touch and some are more like heads
of augers. But all are polished
apples offered as you approach
to be grasped and turned until
the bolt springs and the mechanism
swallows. Then with a little push
the barrier swings wide and new
rooms or the whole outside waits.
When you release the ball it spins
to rest, cool and fat as a period.
Sharpening a Saw
Any blunt rock can whet a knife
or even scythe blade just by
rubbing the edge at the right pitch,
coaching steel to bright and deadly
thinness, But only a lean hard
file will find the new edges on
a saw, each tooth with its own
attitude and faces to be
flattened, to be caressed to
biting definition. It is
the different angles of the hundred
teeth that make the blade cut fast,
the crystals brushed new and tilted
like little wedges that follow
each other and follow each other
to split the fibers going this
way and coming back, savoring
each crumb of dust, the work done by
prisms no bigger than a line of salt.
Working in the Rain
My father loved more than anything to
work outside in wet weather. Beginning
at daylight he'd go out in dripping brush
to mow or pull weeds for hog and chickens.
First his shoulders got damp and the drops from
his hat ran down his back. When even his
armpits were soaked he came in to dry out
by the fire, make coffee, read a little.
But if the rain continued he'd soon be
restless, and go out to sharpen tools in
the shed or carry wood in from the pile,
then open up a puddle to the drain,
working by steps back into the downpour.
I think he sought the privacy of rain,
the one time no one was likely to be
out and he was left to the intimacy
of drops touching every leaf and tree in
the woods and the easy muttering of
drip and runoff, the shine of pools behind
grass dams. He could not resist the long
ritual, the companionship and freedom
of falling weather, or even the cold
drenching, the heavy soak and chill of clothes
and sobbing of fingers and sacrifice
of shoes that earned a baking by the fires
and washed fatigue after the wandering
and loneliness in the country of rain.