 
            
      
    Betsy Sholl, a former poet laureate of Maine, is author of several collections of poetry, including Otherwise Unseeable (2014).
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Second Line
A poem
Blindfolded and gagged, tossed in the back
	of a car—it's how they gather up young men
	and after tire irons and chains, leave some
lying in the road like dirt, rained on all night.
	Some are bundled-up, tossed off a bridge
	into the river whose muddy swirls warn:
kick, fight, breathe, twist your arms free.
	Some do. They rise, spit out the rags
	stuffed in their mouths, limp back to town,
and one begins to sing—slow at first— Lord,
	I want to be in that number ... Another moans
	a low muted tone where words won't go.
Tonight I Am Mending Clothes
I use old cloth on the knees, stitch boldly.
 The dress I hem more carefully
 camouflaging the thread, an animal in grass.
Honor the Aged
You may be saved yet.
 Your grandmother's praying.
 She's saying to anyone who'll listen:
 Throw out the curtains. Stop
 coaxing wind down from the trees.

