A Pastoral
At that time the sheep called to him
 From their wormy bellies, as they
 Lay bloating in the field. He was
 A pastoralist,
 The schoolhouse hardly handsize
 In a sky of flax.
                              He began
 Then to keep the sayings of man
 (The left hand writing; the right hand
 Crossing out) farming the time by day
 With a great rake
 And in the evening hearing myths
 Of the hurricane and the tornado
 (Straws driven through glass),
 And of the waking in the grave
 (The sharp hands of brothers buried
 Together).
                       In the deep night the rat-
 Traps in the seed room broke the rat's
 Back, and the rat called to him in
 The next room over in a penetrating
 Eloquent way.
                            In the parlor it was
 Always deep night where the separated
 Organs of the living slept in jars
 (The lank goiter and the rotted
 Appendix) awaiting the end-time
 When the emasculated ram will rise
 In the flax-blue sky
 (Cold as the final bluing of a Sunday wash)
 And all of us will know
 The use in beauty of the whole body.
 In the hay field was the beginning
 Of knowledge:
 Sour wine, the great rake hoisted
 Toward the high sun-altar of the stack
 And the hoist rope hauled out hard
 (Like a greased whip of which the stories
 Told were of the severing of limbs)
 By two staggering teams—and the whole
 Sun in its extreme tower of noon.
 All he heard was violent and sad
 But he kept on writing the sayings
 Of man with his left hand, and sent
 Them off in broken words, and waited
 In the mortal field
 Listening to the mice in the bottom
 Of the stack.
                         Now though the schoolhouse
 Hangs like a stone over the field
 Robed in its winding sheet as blue as air,
 The shepherd hand of eloquence still keeps
 And flashes
 Out the sayings of the man—
 And the other (the right hand of
 Obliterating habit) sleeps.
Copyright Credit: Allen Grossman, "A Pastoral" from The Ether Dome and Other Poems: New and Selected (1979-1991). Copyright © 1991 by Allen Grossman.  Reprinted by permission of New Directions Publishing Corporation.
Source: Woman on the Bridge: Over the Chicago River : A Book of Poems (New Directions Publishing Corporation, 1979)


