11-3-2025
Seth Brady Tucker
SOLACE
A man parks his truck sideways
on the top of the structure, kids
spill out on skateboards, the man
is a father & these children scream
in delight & another man looks up
from his warm beer, searching; the sun
is sideways across the water & a crimson duck
flitters across the bright skyline & disappears
& Trump is still President & there are so many guns
& they outnumber us all & somewhere a child
is in a cellar just as Ursula K. Le Guin warned us
they would be—& that we must know this child’s
suffering to know joy—but this father & his raucous
children are oblivious & loving & loved & wild in play
& his over-worked knees grind as he watches
the kids speed down the oiled concrete ramps,
rough hands on pipe he laid, skateboards skirting
danger & taking whooping risks along the shaded
spiraling levels down & down, & he helped build
these ramps & poured the shell & his truck shines
& spills bright tin music & it is enough to know
that this man & his children all exist no matter
what this country will do to them & I am alone
behind glass, high in my rarified white air & below
me the man limps quickly down the concrete
ramp when there is a sharp cry from the dark
& I press my face against the cold glass & listen
& pray that the child will emerge unscathed
& unhurt & ready to trust that the love
that is trembled through the father’s hands
is enough to save us.
TO CROP, TO THRESH
Alfalfa & cloves & the smell of cinnamon
coat your skin like fur, the sweat new as sad rain,
the sweet condensation of the canvas water bag far off
& hung on the cattle-truck. Nearby, steers complain in their pen.
Your work is a panic
to keep up; the orbit
of hay bales are a form
of forever that your father
shoulders easily to his neck.
Wyoming
burns away everything but the chaff. You stumble under the bales.
You buck them up from knees with two hands curved into hooks,
& each punch into the wet meat of the bales is like a punishment
& this is how to learn the suffering that makes a man, & the hole
that finally rips away from the hay is a ball of rattlesnakes; the bale
is the planet you heft; the boil of baby snakes is a deadly moon;
& your father has a bale across his thighs, boots careless
as they twist & crush the curling children of our eternal sins.
These babies, you think,
born toothless
& without the voice
that would call down
their necessary gods.
NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH
The poisoned elm dies
with a whimper of leaves;
like applause amid the thrumming
of insect wings, like a dirge made of arachnid song; stiff
thorax & mandible squeals sounded down in wooden
circulations of sapped deciduous blood.
An empty bottle
of Roundup™ lies in the ground cover like a handgun found in a lake.
In the fall you will rock the trunk back & forth until
you hear the satisfying sound of joints dislocating,
feel the splinter of wooden bones shattering
along the length of the trunk. You should know—
this is timepiece, just like your history—nature broken
apart by chemical hammers, roots cracked
from the abdomen or fronds adorned
with the bloom of a gun.
Leaves spasm in suffering. They feel.
This last circadian witness to the rise & fall of a community.
Another of our failures:
the fall of leaf & branch
& bough, un-made in the image
of the man across the street, bare-chested,
slow mist of the dying world spurting from the yellow
vessel he pumps, another gun. He signals an end of days
for whomever it was who thought
to lovingly plant this elm here in the first place,
something
anything
everything
to watch over everyone
who chose to stay so far behind.
-from The Cruelty Virtues, celebrated with the author's permission and selected by PoemoftheWeek.com Founder and Editor, Andrew McFadyen-Ketchum
Seth Brady Tucker is executive director of the Longleaf Writers’ Conference and he teaches creative writing at the Lighthouse Writers' Workshop and at the Colorado School of Mines near Denver. He is senior prose editor for the Tupelo Quarterly Review, is originally from Wyoming, and once served as an Army Paratrooper with the 82ndAirborne in Iraq. He is a multi-genre writer and his work recently appeared in the Los Angeles Review, Driftwood, Copper Nickel, Birmingham Poetry Review, and others.











