United States, (b. 1969)
The Hog
- Tired by the sheer size of himself,
- mountainous, rough, the hog dropped
- across the doorway, hoof-bound, footsore,
- docile now from the struggle that sweetens meat.
- The children poked him with sticks
- to see if he was spent. When even a snort
- was too much for him, the children crept closer
- to touch with one finger, a whole hand,
- and then, emboldened by their risk, the hot,
- foul smell of his skin, to stand on this tired lump.
- His breathing raised them, then dropped them.
- Twenty minutes at least before the beast recovers
- and, by then, the father will have opened
- one of its veins.
- With the hog drawn, hung-up, and draining,
- the father opens the belly with a heavy cleaver
- and, among the warm sacks and globes, his hand
- finds the bladder and cuts it out.
- He drains it, passes it to his children
- who will blow it up and tie both ends
- or fill it with chrysanthemum water.
- The juice will taste that much sweeter
- because they know where the sack came from
- and it was promised to them
- when they and the hog were about the same size.
© Stephen Frech. If Not for These Wrinkles of Darkness: Rembrandt, a Self Portrait. Buffalo, NY: White Pines Press (2001).
Sell-Portrait with Saskia: The Prodigal Son in the Tavern
- Why reduce myself to rags,
- my rags of clothing to a last patch of modesty?
- Frayed by the dog who tore at my sleeve,
- confused by the first worn and tired vision
- I saw of myself in a pool,
- even picking gravel from under the skin of my knees,
- I would still remember the coins
- jangling in my purse, the price
- good tobacco commands, and the cloud of it
- whorling in my lungs and in my head.
- Why must I paint myself as the Prodigal Son
- returned shabby and repentant?
- Even reduced to eating swine-meal,
- having to kick the snouts away,
- I would’ still relish in what passes my lips,
- hunger for more than what I have.
- Repentance, then, is bad fortune, hardship,
- and longing.
- I fatten my dry lip to split it,
- hold the sweet tobacco on that crack.
- The leaf burns at first, but eases me into numbness.
- I smolder with the pipe and everything I’ve held
- just so in my teeth: jeweled scimitars,
- draw-strings, cork stoppers, lacing, nipples.
- I’ve painted myself in the tavern with a woman
- who lets me touch her and a glass of wine
- so tall, it exceeds the length of my arm
- from elbow to finger-tip.
- I’ll ignore the lightness of it all and the winds.
- picking up – I know how this story ends
- and the good father will forgive me.
© Stephen Frech. If Not for These Wrinkles of Darkness: Rembrandt, a Self Portrait. Buffalo, NY: White Pines Press (2001).
About the Poet:
Stephen Frech, United States, (b. 1969) is a poet and educator. Frech is an Associate Professor of English at Millikin University, Decatur, IL. He is also the founder and editor of Oneiros Press, publisher of limited edition, letterpress poetry broadsides. [DES-07/19]
Additional information:
- Personal website of Stephen Frech
- More information on Oneiros Press can be found here and here.
- Stephen Frech at Millikin University
- Rembrandt – The Prodigal Son in the Tavern