At The Graves in Memory Poem by Gibbons Ruark

At The Graves in Memory



The land there rolls no more than the quiet river
Curves. Drifts of pine straw resin the ground.
Summer is remembered like a wild fever

That left the forehead when the sun went down.
That February day was mild as Easter.
There to the west of my abandoned town,

Shirt-sleeved gravediggers smoked at a corner
Of lawn unbroken by an upright stone.
Soft wind in the pines, the sound of water

Stilled in memory, the merciful brief drone
Of the old liturgy, and it was over.
My mother's body by my father's bones.

Winter. Easter weather. Long gone life-givers.
The land there rolls no more than the quiet river.

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Gibbons Ruark

Gibbons Ruark

Raleigh, North Carolina
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