Uncle Elwood, By SIDNEY L. HALL, JR.
With Y-shaped wood,
Always a twisted,
Weathered Y,
Uncle Elwood
Is showing us how to dowse.
It’s Saturday.
My father horsing around again,
Playing the skeptic,
Maybe to get a taste of
What he could never be.
We watch the stick
Ride, and finally tremble,
And point down,
Like a young man looking
into his young wife’s eyes.
Under a green
Clump of grass, studded
With angular stones,
A mysterious vein pulses
With water, and keeps
the earth alive.
While we all try to imagine it,
My father runs down to the
cellar and turns the underground
pipes off and on, and
We call down to him.
Uncle Elwood gets it every time.
My father proves
Even to his own children
Who won’t believe,
That there are more things
In heaven and under earth, and that
Even an old man whose pants
are too short, and whose
buttoned collar squeezes too much
Color into his aged face,
Even this old man, if he
Has practiced his art and
Has the right shape of Y,
Can find the water every time.
Sidney Hall is a poet who lives, writes and gardens in New Hampshire. 1992 by Sidney Hall. Reprinted by permission.