What Your Cousin Davey Knew
Do you think your cousin Davey knew,
When he suddenly died at 62,
That the time he sat on his front porch
After supper,
Under the Summer Triangle,
When the air was finally cooling off—
God it was a hot one—
his thoughts drowned out
By the katydids and cricket calls,
The trilling owl and far-away yelp
Of the coyotes,
Answered by the rising bay of his hounds
In their compound just behind the
Clapboard house—
Missing a few shingles
And a shutter or two—
Things he just hadn’t gotten around to
fixing
Quite yet;
Do you think he knew
That it was the last time he’d see those brightening stars,
Or hear that fine chorus,
Or hush his dogs—
for Pete’s sake, shut up—
Or that he’d never get
to those little annoying repairs?
Patricia Thrushart
http://www.thewatershedjournal.org/
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