United States, (b. 1964)
Summer of the Pig
- One morning they appeared—
- tiny pink bodies,
- curling ribbons of tail,
- hungry from the start;
- the soft grunts and flat snouts
- rooting for teats
- on the belly of that old tired sow.
- Quick minded,
- in three days they learned to sit,
- to stay, to come,
- as I leveled troughs
- sweetened with scraped scraps from our plates.
- And I, the young shepherd of these squealing pink shoats,
- following my voice like lambs.
- Void of sweat glands,
- they reveled in their daily bucket baths—
- holding still and smiling as I rubbed red clay
- off their coarse coconut bodies,
- and wrapped them in frayed patterned towels,
- losing two to suffocation
- beneath the sow refusing to get up,
- though I hollered, shoved;
- viced her tail with pliers.
- They were mine all summer,
- and we sang and squealed and hiked
- those 20 acres, staff in hand
- for three months,
- 30 legs;
- 7 snouts;
- one nose,
- till September and school,
- when they grew into sows and hogs,
- turning triad ears down
- to the ancient whispers of the earth,
- with no memory of my voice
- when I returned
- and called each by name.
- The Summer of the Pig
- plowed under like the dried stalks
- of sweet corn,
- and bare rooted clay.
- Then came the winter,
- and a freezer full of pork,
- white paper pounds
- of bacon and tenderloin,
- Sunday night treats
- of sausage wrapped in pancakes;
- when I walked the flats without song,
- the tap of my staff keeping time,
- the old tired sow
- alone and pregnant
- in her pen.
About the Poet:
Karla K. Morton, United States, (b. 1964), is a poet, writer, photographer, storyteller and songwriter. She holds a Journalism degree from Texas A&M University and was the 2010 Texas Poet Laureate. Morton and has thirteen collections of poetry and has been featured on Good Morning Texas, NPR, PBS, ABC News, CBS News and in countless newspapers, blogs and magazines.
She is a member and Councilor of the Texas Institute of Letters and is a recipient of the Writer-in-Residency E2C Grant, a Betsy Colquitt Award Winner and was twice an Indie National Book Award Winner. Her poems have been published in such poetry journals as: Alaska Quarterly Review, Comstock Review, Southword Literary Journal, American Life in Poetry: The Poetry Foundation, Boulevard, Lascaux Review, New Ohio Review, Borderlands, New Texas and many others. [DES-07/22]
Additional information:
- Read more on Morton on her two web sites: http://www.texaspoetlaureate.com/ and http://www.kkmorton.com/