Grinding Wheel
Where the buttress of concrete Stands firmly, supporting the weight Of 10,000 northbound car trips daily, A little house endured for many years.
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Before the freeway came, there were
Small houses, in neat, squared off rows,
On San Benito Street. Tiny front yards and
Vegetable gardens in the back, filled
The lands south of Ventura Avenue.
Where the buttress of concrete
Stands firmly, supporting the weight
Of 10,000 northbound car trips daily,
A little house endured for many years.
Standing taller than it’s footprint.
White clapboard wood, overlapping
To the roofline, with a small porch
Held up by a turned wooden post,
Slats of tongue and groove ran outward
To meet a visitor at the steps.
The front-door window was bordered
In panes of colored glass, an etched
Window concealed the concealed interior
With a yellowed blind pulled down.
An ornate brass handle held fast
The door that lead into the tiny room.
A naked lamp hung from the parlor ceiling,
Wallpaper was peeling in large sheets.
There was no furniture, but a single table,
Rickety and reinforced, and a chair for one.
The singular seat was for a lonely old man,
His Armenian bible opened to a passage,
Before an empty plate and solitary fork.
A dishrag was neatly folded at the sink.
Outside, beyond the enclosed backporch,
Two wooden doors opened to the cellar,
Carved from hardpan with shovels.
There sat the man’s grinding wheel
From his trade of sharpening knives,
Pruning shears and household utensils.
Grinding with locomotion, only his own.
A well-worn stone on a handcrafted stand,
Spun by his efforts, sat idle,
And purposefully hidden away.
A porous stone with overworked edges,
Fatigued like the man separated from home.
By Stephen Barile
From: United States