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![]() Contents | October 2002 More on poetry from The Atlantic Monthly. Also by Lola Haskins: Love (2000) |
The Atlantic Monthly | October 2002
The Ballad of Foot-and-Mouth
West Yorkshire, 2001 by Lola Haskins ..... One-ery, Two-ery, Ziccary, Zeven, Hollow-bone, Crack-a-bone, Ten-or-eleven, Spin, Spun, It-must-be-done So they push them up—the ewes, the wethers, the lambs, the tups— With their yellow dozers like flowers o Eena, Deena, Dina, Dust, Catt'lla, Jweena, Wina, Wust With their yellow dozers like flowers o The ewes, the half-grown lambs, the tups in mountains now with their legs stiff up Ein, Tein, Tethra, Methera, Pimp, Awfus, Daufus, Deefus, Dumfus, Dix In mountains now with their legs stiff up The wethers, the half-grown lambs, the ewes And what is motherhood now o One-ery, Two-ery, Ziccary, Zeven, Hollow-bone, Crack-a-bone, Ten-or-Eleven, Spin, Spun, It-must-be-done And what is motherhood now o as the ash smoulders in the backs of our throats of the ewes, the wethers, the half-grown lambs And the moors all empty but for the wind that moans as it licks at the dry stone walls And that's your motherhood now o Spin, Spun, It-must-be-done, Twiddledum, Twaddledum, Twenty-one Lola Haskins teaches at the University of Florida and is the author of several collections of poetry, including The Rim Benders (2001) and Desire Lines, to be published in 2004. Copyright © 2002 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All rights reserved. The Atlantic Monthly; October 2002; The Ballad of Foot-and-Mouth; Volume 290, No. 3; 72. | [an error occurred while processing this directive] |
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