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Lineman

 

            (Grand Trunk Western Railroad, 1967)

 

Cocky and freshly spurred, he climbed

Amid the alien corn:  green row

On row arrayed in June and primed.

He climbed and saw those ranked spears grow

 

As close as ears could get to tracks.

Far off, four rails consumed their ties

Until they were the least of facts

And disappeared before his eyes.

 

This was his summer job:  to dig

Heels in, step up, belt on, come down.

But slung back in his aerie's rig,

A yellow hard hat for a crown,

 

The lineman only meant to sight

How far his lonely kingdom ran

From such a pole, at such a height

As might become a brand new man.

 

He strung the wire and walked till Fall,

To see what might be out of joint.

But nothing there seemed wrong at all,

From vantage clear to vanishing point.

 

Len Krisak

 

 

From The Kent and Sussex Poetry Society
Prize Anthology
, © 2000.  Reprinted by
permission of the author.

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