Michael Creighton
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What the Rubber Farmer Said
 

May 2004, Kottayam District, South India  

 

Sit and drink your coffee—
when it rains like this, what else can we do?
See there—how I gather the water
that runs in crooked torrents from my roof?
My neighbors called me a fool,
but dented buckets and pans
have kept my well full, even when
those owned by this district’s many fools
ran dry.

You can smell that, can’t you?
I, for one, could not have borne this life
if I had not found beauty buried in the stench
of raw sheets of latex
and fresh piles of cow dung.

Yes, of course I pray.
For 60 years, I have given thanks
for my wife and six daughters.
And I praise God daily
for the thousand raucous shades of green
that collide in these hills—and for
my neighbor’s rice paddy field, where,
well mixed with the sun’s own yellow,
they all somehow settle,
calm and faintly glowing.

 

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Michael Creighton is a fifth grade teacher who lives in New Delhi with his wife and three kids. His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in The Sunday Oregonian (US), The Asian Age (India), and Verseweavers, the Oregon State Poetry Association’s annual anthology of prize winning poetry.
E-mail: mocreighton at yahoo dot com  

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summer 2007 | kaleidowhirl
books and chapbooks from authors in this issue