Breaking
by Grant Clauser
First it’s the dryer’s rubber belts
burned through and finally snapped
that gets me down on the floor,
my father’s old tools scattered about
as I try to understand how things work.
And then a week later, the washer
rocks off its hinges like a wolverine
chewing its leg free from a trap,
and one by one, things break down,
need fixing. This chair leg loose.
That outlet sparking when we need
more light. Pipes leaking. Cold
creeping in where the insulation’s old,
and more things waiting
broken in the garage and shed,
bedrock cracking under the foundation
and the kidnapping and the killing
one thing after another while we learn
she was a poet, he a nurse,
the gear teeth of the great machine
cracked from grinding down rocks
and now even the tools to fix it
look small, hardly up to the task.
Grant Clauser’s most recent book is Temporary Shelters. His poems have appeared in The American Poetry Review, Terrain, Kenyon Review, and other journals. He’s an editor for a national media company and teaches poetry at Rosemont College in Pennsylvania.
