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The Framing Square
Rick Mulkey | Poetry
If only I could believe in the world the way my father’s
framing square leaning against the garage wall
believes in its usefulness, that it will once again
edge a straight line or shape an angle so a SKIL saw
can capture the final form square and sure
as any well-made item should be. Or even the way
a tool box patient in its dusty corner blanketed
in a nest of cob webs knows, if it knows anything,
this uselessness will pass. Nails sleeping in their Mason Jars
and forged hammers idle on a shelf understand dead gods
resurrect themselves. Faith is a bag of bolts
we save in case a situation arises. But having no surety
for what is possible in a world always too oblique,
always too slanted toward grief and pain, I measure
the matter of the universe each night I close my eyes,
fitting and joining in dreams and stanzas what reality
refuses to construct erect and plumb.
Rick Mulkey is the author of six collections, including All These Hungers, Ravenous: New & Selected Poems, and Toward Any Darkness. Individual poems and essays have appeared widely, including Poetry East, Georgia Review, Crab Orchard Review, The Literary Review, Denver Quarterly, Shenandoah, and Poetry Daily. Mulkey is director of the Converse Low Residency MFA.