Eclogue for an Extractive Economy

Todd Davis

Each day I think this will be the lastwarbler. With the seasons confused,these small birds stay longer and longerto starve. Wrapped in the long cordof its vine, I eat a fox grape to darkenmy mouth. An itinerant word flees,a bracelet of language fastenedto the lone deer the neighbor shotand quartered. Like a white-footed mouseburrowing beneath snow, the stone in my sister'sbody opens to infection. The doctor diagnosesthe shadow and buries it undergroundto hold the poison.                                                        The geologist also seekswhat's imprisoned. All around us pump jacksand the sounds of new wells being drilled.The derrickman ignores what happenswhen fossils are dislodged and scattered.Where the mountain was cut to the groundthere's nothing to hold back the flood.The last year of his life my father struggledto breathe. I missed the hour of his deathand woke to blood sopping the pillow.I pull on my boots before dawn. The elevatorcage clanks as it descends the shaft. Withoutmuch light, its impossible to seewhere the sea used to be.

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Todd Davis is the author of seven books of poetry, most recently Coffin Honey and Native Species, both published by Michigan State University Press. He has won the Midwest Book Award, the Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Bronze and Silver Awards, the Gwendolyn Brooks Poetry Prize, the Chautauqua Editors Prize, and the Bloomsburg University Book Prize. His poems appear in such journals and magazines as Alaska Quarterly Review, American Poetry Review, Gettysburg Review, Iowa Review, Missouri Review, North American Review, Orion, Southern Humanities Review, and Western Humanities Review. He teaches environmental studies at Pennsylvania State University’s Altoona College.

55.2

Auburn, Alabama

Auburn University

Editors
Anton DiSclafani, Rose McLarney

Managing Editor
Caitlin Rae Taylor

Poetry Editor
Rose McLarney

Southern Humanities Review is the literary quarterly published from the Department of English at Auburn University in Auburn, Alabama. Founded in 1967, SHR publishes fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.

Work published in Southern Humanities Review is considered for Best American Essays, Best American Poetry, Best American Short Stories, New Stories from the South, Prize Stories: O. Henry Awards, and the Pushcart Prize.

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