The Hobbs Boys

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  • Rural Life

    The Hobbs Boys

    The Hobbs boys were in today for dinner,
    Three generations
    Clambering down from the sprayer
    And clumping through the door
    In muddy boots.
    Jay Ray, patriarch, pushing seventy
    Weathered face, gnarled hands
    And bright blue eyes
    That twinkle when he smiles.
    Lee Jay, barely forty,
    Face ruddy and already lined
    From the sun and the worries
    That come with this hard-scrabble
    Life he has chosen.
    Finally, Bay Lee, not quite five.
    Tow-headed and full of joy.
    He runs across the restaurant
    To give me his order
    “A cheese and a burger”
    Proud as can be that he is helping today.
    He tells me he is going to be a farmer,
    Like grandpa, like daddy,
    And I whisper a fervent prayer
    That there will still be family farms
    When he is old enough to be the patriarch
    And bring two new generations
    In for dinner.

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    Poetry is either something that lives like fire inside you or else it is nothing, an empty formalized bore around which pedants can endlessly drone their notes and explanations.

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    BessFromKenton’s Poems (19)

    Title Comments
    Title Comments
    Road Rage 0
    Writer's Block 2
    House-Keeping 1
    Longing for Robert Frost 0
    Anniversary Weekend 0
    Duck Blind 1
    So...are we engaged now? 2
    Fall 2009 0
    Men Drinking Coffee 1
    God's Crayons 1
    Mushroom Cloud 1
    The Hilltop Lounge 0
    The Hobbs Boys 0
    Homesick 4
    Monday 2
    Watching the Harvest 2
    Sharing 1
    Three A.M. 2
    Dinner Rush 0