Poems
The Bull Calf, 1956
The thing could barely stand. Yet taken from his mother and the barn smells he still impressed with his pride, with the promise of sovereignity in the way his head moved to take us in. The fierce sunlight tugging the maize from the ground liked at his shapely flanks. He was too young for all that pride. I thought of the deposed Richard II. "No money in bull calves," Freeman had said. The visiting clergyman rubbed the nostrils now snuffing pathetically at the windless day. "A pity," he sighed. My gaze slipped off his hat toward the empty sky that circled over the black knot of men, over us and the calf waiting for the first blow. Struck, the bull calf drew in his thin forelegs as if gathering strength for a mad rush… tottered…raised his darkening eyes to us, and I saw we were at the far end of his frightened look, growing smaller and smaller till we were only the ponderous mallet that flicked his bleeding ear and pushed him over on his side, stiffly, like a block of wood. Below the hill's crest the river snuffled on the improvised beach. We dug a deep pit and threw the dead calf into it. It made a wet sound, a sepulchral gurgle, as the warm sides bulged and flattened. Settled, the bull calf lay as if asleep, one foreleg over the other, bereft of pride and so beautiful now, without movement, perfectly still in the cool pit, I turned away and wept.