My
grandfather let it slip like a joke
that
years ago in Widener’s Valley,
back
in that Virginia sawmill town,
Grandmother
drove herself to the college
at
Emory and had a conversation with the dean, 
convincing
him with Appalachian logic
to
let her audit classes for free.
She
soaked up the things they taught 
like
sorghum on biscuits, like hog lard 
simmering
with beans. In her stiff bodice 
and
ebony skirt, she turned away 
from
the boys’ snickers and didn’t lay 
her
usual sharp tongue to whipping 
those
scalawags.  She held her strong back 
straighter,
pointed her chin to the purple clouds 
stewing
over the hollow like she knew 
something
special and would keep it close.  
When
I got the nerve, I asked her why 
she’d
done that peculiar thing, let slip 
my
secret wish to stand at the college 
in
Jefferson City and learn my way out 
of
this mountain life.  She patted my knee, 
leaned
into my shoulder, You won’t be catching
much of nothing chasing dreams around here.
Then
she stopped, blue eyes long over the hills, 
her
voice low as the whisper I keep hearing
on
lonesome nights, but child, 
you keep on chasing them anyway.
Sandy Coomer is a poet, mixed media
artist, and endurance athlete. Her poems have most recently been published in Big Muddy, Icarus Down Review, Hypertrophic
Literary Magazine, and Main Street
Rag. She is the author of two poetry collections: Continuum (Finishing Line Press) and The Presence of Absence (2014 Janice Keck Literary Award for Poetry).
www.sandycoomer.com
