Bright Leaf

written by


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Like words put to a song, the bunched tobacco leaves 
are strung along a stick, the women
standing in the August heat for hours—since first light—
under the pitched tin roof, barefoot, and at their feet 
the babies, bare-assed, dirty, eating dirt.
The older children hand the leaves from the slide, 
three leaves at a time, stalks upright, three handers
for each stringer, and three more heaped canvas slides 
waiting in what little shade there is: it’s ten o’clock, 
almost dinnertime. They pull the pails of cold lunch 
and Mason jars of tea out of the spring
when they see the farmer coming from the field, their men 
stripped to the waist, polished by sweat and tired as mules. 
By afternoon, the loose cotton dresses, even 
the headrags are dark with sweat.
Still their fingers never miss a stitch,
though they’re paid not by the stick but by the day,
and the talk—unbroken news of cousins and acquaintances—
unwinding with the ball of twine, a frayed snuff-twig 
bouncing on one lip, the string paying out
through their calluses, the piles of wide green leaves 
diminishing, until the men appear with the last slide 
and clamber up the rafters of the barn
to line the loaded sticks along the tiers. It’s Friday:

the farmer pays with a wad of ones and fives, 
having turned the mule out to its feed and water, 
hung up the stiffened traces and the bit. He checks 
again the other barns, already fired, crude ovens 
of log and mud where the crop is cured;
in that hot dry acrid air, spreads a yellowing leaf 
across his palm, rolls an edge in his fingers, 
gauging by its texture and its smell
how high to drive the fire.
His crew is quiet in the pickup truck—did you think
they were singing? They are much too tired to even speak, 
can barely lick salt from the back of a hand, brush at flies, 
hush a baby with a sugartit. And the man
who owns this land is also tired.
Everyday this week he’s meant to bring home pears 
from the old tree by the barn, but now he sees
the fruit has fallen, sees the yellow jackets feeding there. 
He lights a Lucky, frames a joke for his wife—he’ll say 
their banker raised a piss-poor field this year.
And she will lean against the doorjamb
while he talks, while he scrubs his hands at the tin basin 
with a split lemon and a pumice stone, rubs them raw 
trying to cut the gummy resin, that stubborn
black stain within the green.
Like words put to a song, the bunched tobacco leaves 
are strung along a stick, the women
standing in the August heat for hours—since first light—
under the pitched tin roof, barefoot, and at their feet 
the babies, bare-assed, dirty, eating dirt.
The older children hand the leaves from the slide, 
three leaves at a time, stalks upright, three handers
for each stringer, and three more heaped canvas slides 
waiting in what little shade there is: it’s ten o’clock, 
almost dinnertime. They pull the pails of cold lunch 
and Mason jars of tea out of the spring
when they see the farmer coming from the field, their men 
stripped to the waist, polished by sweat and tired as mules. 
By afternoon, the loose cotton dresses, even 
the headrags are dark with sweat.
Still their fingers never miss a stitch,
though they’re paid not by the stick but by the day,
and the talk—unbroken news of cousins and acquaintances—
unwinding with the ball of twine, a frayed snuff-twig 
bouncing on one lip, the string paying out
through their calluses, the piles of wide green leaves 
diminishing, until the men appear with the last slide 
and clamber up the rafters of the barn
to line the loaded sticks along the tiers. It’s Friday:

the farmer pays with a wad of ones and fives, 
having turned the mule out to its feed and water, 
hung up the stiffened traces and the bit. He checks 
again the other barns, already fired, crude ovens 
of log and mud where the crop is cured;
in that hot dry acrid air, spreads a yellowing leaf 
across his palm, rolls an edge in his fingers, 
gauging by its texture and its smell
how high to drive the fire.
His crew is quiet in the pickup truck—did you think
they were singing? They are much too tired to even speak, 
can barely lick salt from the back of a hand, brush at flies, 
hush a baby with a sugartit. And the man
who owns this land is also tired.
Everyday this week he’s meant to bring home pears 
from the old tree by the barn, but now he sees
the fruit has fallen, sees the yellow jackets feeding there. 
He lights a Lucky, frames a joke for his wife—he’ll say 
their banker raised a piss-poor field this year.
And she will lean against the doorjamb
while he talks, while he scrubs his hands at the tin basin 
with a split lemon and a pumice stone, rubs them raw 
trying to cut the gummy resin, that stubborn
black stain within the green.

© Ellen Bryant Voigt