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The Chimney
Inside the chimney my father built with stones we hauled from Six Mile Creek, above the flue, beneath the soot, is a penny I watched him press into the mortar before he hefted another slab of shale, another fractured gypsum brick, so after the pitched roof falls, after the shingles and cherry rafters crack and burn in someone else's fire, until the chimney stands marooned in the clearing in the woods, and later falls, smooth stones sliding down the hill, when someone, a young man walking to the creek mouth, stops at the glint from a rock, mica or quartz, and finds a coin so black and thin he can barely read the year — then, my father said, someone will think of him, long ago pulling the penny from his pocket and pressing it against the drying chimney, leaving his long thumbprint swirling. Published in Chattahoochee (Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 2004). |
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| Published: 14 April
2009
© 2009 Patrick Phillips and Southern Spaces |
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