The Poems

Freight

From the Summer, 2010, issue 

(No. 24)

At night the freight train murmurs to the floor.

The floor is moved and shudders in its boards,

and we’re awake. I wish I had a better ear.

A nail chatters in its slot, taps up against the wood

it split once, years and years ago. Its beat

might teach us of a nail’s life: a single thrust,

baptismal, then the holding fast, the holding things

one to the other. This is a life that knows

with clarity its purpose—for a time. The ties

do loosen, though; and so the fretful nights

when train seduces floor, disordering the peace.

I wish I had a better ear. For all this fuss

the train sticks to its route: it perseveres,

moving and moving on and leaving things

a little more dislodged. And we’re awake.