The Words of a Farmer on Monday
It is the commerce of farmers with hands in their pockets.
It is used by old wives
and the things they’ve known not having.
The stains in his pants are scattered language,
and scars the marks of punctuation.
To speak he must harvest the fields for syllables
and the cries of calves for meaning.
The things he says become the atmosphere
that romances the clover each rain.
They fill the woodchuck holes
to save the haybine from trial.
The radio does its best in the absence of terms.
Sometimes cows are lonely things to sing to.
Talk of spiritual ties to the land,
of wholesome ways of living
and it hurts his ears.
He disappears each time.
In a few words he knows who you are,
and he’s reminded who he is.
You both feel sad.
Now that you’ve met the farmer you know his story.
He has told you in personal algorithm:
He dies, losing his farm, losing his mind,
but to a single morning star
he doesn’t give up the words
that have held him this long.
The Words of a Farmer on Tuesday
He walks the morning stars to the barn
to wake cows from their dreams,
full of things he might not say that day.
Sometimes his words collect together like pigeons huddled on rafters.
Sometimes they wear on the inside of his chest,
like dirt alleys in a paddock.
A few words he gives to his wife over coffee
swell into a pragmatic humanity
that glides through the fields
and over the heads of clover.
Sometimes his words are like broken haybines.
Finally, he has too many words and must die.
It is too hard for air
to filter through packed sentences in his rib cage.
Silence: he makes his final offering to the world.
“Hell smells like teat dip.”
“Milk 71 in the bucket.”
“I am culled.”
The Words of a Farmer on Wednesday
He shouts to get them to their feet.
He curses their sicknesses, their obstinacies, their dead calves, and their grain costs.
He calls them when he feeds them.
These are sounds that don’t make a story.
He pulls on his dirty pants in stiff, difficult motions.
It reminds him his legs are embalmed with teat dip.
which sounds like a tractor.
He gathers a concluding breath and holds it to contemplate his endowment.
If he says anything it will be lost in a heavy rattle
that plows through commas.
He can only exhale in compliance.
His corpse reseeds the field.
The Lime Pile Field
In a day’s work I hauled a pile of manure
with a tractor pushed by
my five-year-old hand,
spreading a weightless load
over my grandparents’ carpet.
At the same age I was taught
to never answer a phone.
Bill collectors plucked dark choruses
on our answering machine while we ate cereal,
had birthdays, and said grace.
They talked about a clear balance.
Our fields came with a past that predates me
and sometimes my father.
The Beehive Field. The Lime Pile Field.
The Wishart Place.
It doesn’t matter that I’ve never seen the lime pile,
as long as I will be the next to tell its story.
Once a neighbour shook my father’s hand
and congratulated him on his wholesome way of living.
Once my father hit a bull calf over the head because
it was born without a nose.
I only saw my father cry once.
We herded a dry cow into the shed
and she threw him at the edge of a wagon.
My grandfather asked if he needed an ambulance.
The wind rattled the gate chain
and my grandfather turned
to feed the heifers silage.
Today I stand in the driveway
and watch the spreader approach.
It has its own noises
trapped in rubber hoses.
It’s dirty. Manure clings to it
like mountains that can fall.
The sun turns to oil and blocks out the window.
There’s no sign of a man inside.
Ryan Dennis received a Masters in Writing at the National University of Ireland, Galway in 2009. Ryan tries to explore the act of farming and those who do it through various forms of writing. He lives on a dairy farm in New York. He is a former National Dairy Bowl Champion–a contest like Jeopardy!, but with cow questions. Because this impresses few people, he continues to work on his novel.