Thomas R. Smith




The Paper Boy

My route lassos the outskirts, 
the reclusive, the elderly, the rural— 
the poor who clan in their tarpaper 
islands, the old ginseng hunter

Albert Harm, who strings the "crow's
foot" to dry over his wood stove. 
Shy eyes of fenced-in horses 
follow me down the rutted dirt road. 

At dusk, I pedal past white birches, 
breathe the smoke of spring chimneys, 
my heart working uphill toward someone 
hungry for word from the world. 

I am Mercury, bearing news, my wings
a single-speed maroon Schwinn bike.
I sear my bright path through the twilight 
to the sick, the housebound, the lonely. 

Messages delivered, wire basket empty, 
I part the blue darkness toward supper, 
confident I've earned this day's appetite, 
stronger knowing I'll be needed tomorrow.