foxtales

Poems and Prose by Tim Fox

  • Milk Box

    My heavy eyes,
    Tired with the day’s unfolding—
    A good day of work
    Of writing
    Of crossing off the list,
    Even running—

    a warm January morning before sun,
    Rounding the squares of a familiar block,|
    My feet heavy and light and heavy again . . .
    I found my skull cap, but not my gloves,
    But it was time—

    No stars, no moon, just dark—
    A milk truck,
    Calling me back to an early time
    When we’d have a milk box on the porch
    And the milk would be left there for us
    In a metal box that smelled like … sour milk, of course.

    Where have the milk boxes gone?
    Where the hands that filled them?
    Sucked into the modern economy, I guess
    Sucked into the earth forever,
    As I turn a corner, running home.

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