Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
05.05.2008 10:42 am

Second and gone: The Derby and an open thread

  • Email this
  • Print this

Watching the Derby Saturday was heartbreaking. When the camera cut to Eight Belles on the ground inside the track, all the excitement from the race drained.

I’ve never been a fan of horse racing (or animal racing of any kind), but after my daughter read and watched “Seabiscuit,” she has wanted to watch the Triple Crown events.

What’s on your mind this week, as we await Tuesday’s primaries in Indiana and North Carolina and check our mailboxes (our bank statements) for the anticipated economic stimulus check?

For Eight Belles, here’s one of my favorite poems.

Name of Horses
by Donald Hall

All winter your brute shoulders strained against collars, padding
and steerhide over the ash hames, to haul
sledges of cordwood for drying through spring and summer,
for the Glenwood stove next winter, and for the simmering range.

In April you pulled cartloads of manure to spread on the fields,
dark manure of Holsteins, and knobs of your own clustered with oats.
All summer you mowed the grass in meadow and hayfield, the mowing machine
clacketing beside you, while the sun walked high in the morning;

and after noon’s heat, you pulled a clawed rake through the same acres,
gathering stacks, and dragged the wagon from stack to stack,
and the built hayrack back, uphill to the chaffy barn,
three loads of hay a day from standing grass in the morning.

Sundays you trotted the two miles to church with the light load
a leather quartertop buggy, and grazed in the sound of hymns.
Generation on generation, your neck rubbed the windowsill
of the stall, smoothing the wood as the sea smooths glass.

When you were old and lame, when your shoulders hurt bending to graze,
one October the man, who fed you and kept you, and harnessed you every morning,
led you through corn stubble to sandy ground above Eagle Pond,
and dug a hole beside you where you stood shuddering in your skin,

and lay the shotgun’s muzzle in the boneless hollow behind your ear,
and fired the slug into your brain, and felled you into your grave,
shoveling sand to cover you, setting goldenrod upright above you,
where by next summer a dent in the ground made your monument.

For a hundred and fifty years, in the Pasture of dead horses,
roots of pine trees pushed through the pale curves of your ribs,
yellow blossoms flourished above you in autumn, and in winter
frost heaved your bones in the ground - old toilers, soil makers:

O Roger, Mackerel, Riley, Ned, Nellie, Chester, Lady Ghost.

One comment

Comments are closed.

Streams of consciousness for today:

1- So sad about that horse. Better to go out like that than as dog food.

2- Oil at $122 a barrel today. How friggin high can it go???

3- I keep wondering if all of these small earthquakes are preparing us for a big one….

4- Albert Pujols is da man for stealing home last night- but it sure looked like he was out!

5- How is it that NC and Indiana may decide the Democratic nomination when neither has voted democrat in 3 decades?? Please let it end tonight!!

6- Myanmar seems so far away. Time to send $$ to the Red Cross. So much human sufferring and I bet it gets precious little coverage.

— PurpleDude
5:38 pm May 6th, 2008