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  • Mud
  • Jeff Friedman (bio)

Out of the river, mud climbed broken embankments, crooked staircases, gleaming hulls, the corpses of cows, the skulls of cars. Out of the river, mud entered our homes, roasted its dinners in our ovens, filled our glasses with gritty wine. At night, it made our beds, tucking sheets and spreading covers. Mud said its prayers and wept for us. It ticked in our clocks. It wore our shoes and socks, plastered our ankles. Mud took over banks, gas stations, the mayor’s office. Mud baked our bread. It spoke a thousand tongues, translated our deepest needs into simple sentences. It filled out our forms, smudging the signature line. When mud wavered, even for a moment, it kneeled in soggy churches, renewed its faith. With its conscience clear, mud mixed its own cocktail and went out to spread the word, its logic impossible to rebut. Mud drove a convoy of trucks unloading cargoes of itself. Mud dammed the flood. It hired us to work, raking mounds of it into gardens and carrying it in pails. When we looked up, even the sun was mud. [End Page 97]

Jeff Friedman

Jeff Friedman is the author of five collections of poetry; the most recent, Working in Flour, was published by Carnegie Mellon University Press in 2011. His poems, mini-stories, and translations have appeared in many literary magazines, including American Poetry Review, Poetry, 5 amAgni Online, New England Review, Poetry International, Prairie Schooner, Antioch Review, Quick Fiction, and the New Republic. A contributing editor to Natural Bridge, he lives in West Lebanon, New Hampshire, with the artist Colleen Randall and their dog, Bekka.

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