by Charles Ghigna
Dry rooted in penny coated clay, 
the wiregrassers come 
suntan tamed in drawl 
through the mire faster. 
Machetes high aimed for home, 
they carry the clues of day 
across their open, flying clothes. 
Blade for blade, steel for grass, 
they flog the wire 
with a hungry denim run. 
Black shinhair stares 
boar bristled red out 
from rips of hinged tight jeans. 
Tobacco spittin’ voices 
seep coarse through gapped teeth 
like hot wax from upside-down brown candles. 
An evening shadow sinks itself 
in the open field, 
closing it for night. 
The copper cold dust 
from spun home trucks 
relaxes into dew 
and paints itself across the wiregrass 
that sleeps in rust 
beneath a hush of moon. 
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