Sleepers

A sleeper, they used to call it—

four passes with the giant round saw
and you had a crosstie, 7 inches by 9 of white oak—
at two hundred pounds nearly twice my weight
and ready to break finger or toe—
 

like coffin lids, those leftover slabs,

their new-sawn faces turning gold and brown
as my own in the hot Virginia sun,
drying toward the winter and the woodsaw
 

and on the day of that chore

I turned over a good, thick one
looking for the balance point
 

and roused a three-foot copperhead,

gold and brown like the wood,
disdaining the shoe it muscled across,
 

each rib distinct as a needle stitching leather,

heavy on my foot as a crosstie.

Copyright Credit: Poem copyright ©2000 by David Black, whose most recent book of poetry is The Clown in the Tent, Persimmon Tree Press, 2010. Reprinted by permission of David Black.