Grant Clauser
It’s not the steel or the sharpness
of it—any rough flint can make a fine
line of an edge. It’s the care you take
separating skin from muscle, lifting wood
from other wood to carve a spoon, a stake,
a cane to walk you home along rip rap.
It’s the jobs you’ve lost, the furnace finally
beaten into silence in February, every car
that let you down in the morning,
the maps that failed to get you home.
It’s what you depend on when the difference
between sharp and dull is a full belly.
It’s not about the shape the blade holds
in the sheath or folded against itself
in your pocket, it’s the shape it makes
in your hand, the shape your hand makes
holding it, how two hands form a prayer
when you lift it above your head
and strike down into bone.