KNOT Magazine
Fall Issue 2022
Richard Luftig
Mud Season
God probably didn’t mean
to create a season between
March and May but there it is—
snow melting to false spring,
gravel drives rutted with puddles
twice as wide as your truck.
Even barns and bales
far from the nearest town
seem to wear their time hard
while left-behind whiskers
of wheat and beard-stubble
corn wait half drowned
in fields to be and plowed.
And up past fence posts,
high in telephone wires,
black grackles and mockingbirds,
impatient for the thick gumbo
of ground that can pull a work boot
clear off an ankle to dry, cry
in every voice imaginable
for unseen mates to return their calls.
Richard Luftig is a past professor of educational psychology and special education at Miami University in Ohio who now resides in California. He is a recipient of the Cincinnati Post-Corbett Foundation Award for Literature and a semi- finalist for the Emily Dickinson Society Award. His poems have appeared in numerous literary journals in the United States and internationally in Japan, Canada, Australia, Europe, Thailand, Hong Kong and India. One of his poems was nominated for the 2012 Pushcart Poetry Prize.