wind and the corn and
the rain and the sun talk things
over together

I heard yesterday that my cousin Denny had died.
Like a lot of cousins, we had been close growing up but as our families grew up and we transitioned from being the cousins to being the Aunts and Uncles, we lost touch.
That doesn’t change the feeling of loss though when news like this arrives.
Denny’s Mom was my Aunt Marion and she was my Dad’s older sister.
They grew up on Coit St. down where the street angled off from Plainfield Ave.
The grew up going to Berean Baptist Church and Creston High School.
After World War 2, they both started families and lived on the north end and their kids went to Berean Baptist Church and Creston High School.
We saw each at Church and at school and we lived just blocks apart.
The Hoffman’s and Glerum’s grew up together,
All of my Glerum cousins were older than I was and they were like a second set of older brothers and sisters.
As I drove my older brothers and sisters batty with my batty behavior I am not sure what my cousins thought of me but I always thought it was pretty cool that we had cousins so close.
Denny was the same age as my older brothers and fit right in.
He would show up at almost anytime and join in whatever was going on at our house.
If a ballgame was on tv, he would sit and watch and talk.
If a ballgame was going on in the front yard, he would join in and play.
Unlike the Hoffman’s though, Denny also embraced hunting and fishing and when he got older, bought both a truck AND a motorcycle.
All aspects of life that made my cousin Denny seem to be at a level of cool I could never hope to attain.
There was a time in our lives when Denny would stop off at our house to grab and take me off where ever he was going.
A couple of times Denny took me fishing but quickly figured that me and fishing wasn’t going to happen.
He had the presence of mind to never offer to talk me hunting.
He was brave and a nice guy to be sure, but the thought being around me with a gun in my hands … well, lets say that is something that hasn’t happened to this day.
But we would go visit his classroom at school and he would put me to work sorting papers or books or something.
One night (NIGHT MIND YOU) he stopped by as his neighbor who had an apple orchard had told him that he could help himself to all the ‘drops’ (ripe apples that had fallen off the trees) he wanted and Denny brought me along, in the dark, in the rain, to pick up apples.
A bit crazy but boy was I proud when I came home with a bushel of fresh apples for my Mom.
Another time he grabbed me and he drove out to the house he was having a built on his property out near Cedar Springs.
He was having hard wood floors installed and they had just been stained and he wanted to see how they looked.
The floors looked fine to me but Denny crawled over the floor on his knees, in stocking feet, saying no no no as he did not like how dark they looked.
Then there was the time when he showed up with his new motorcycle and handed me a helmet and I went off for my one and only motorcycle ride.
You just never knew what might happen.
I heard yesterday that my cousin Denny had died.
I have thought about Denny since then.
I thought about all the things he did with me and my family.
I thought about his hunting and fishing.
I thought about his farm, what we called ‘Dennys land’.
I thought about he lived his life.
He was a big part of my life.
This world will be a lesser place without him in it.
There was a high majestic fooling
Day before yesterday in the yellow corn.
And day after to-morrow in the yellow corn
There will be high majestic fooling.
The ears ripen in late summer
And come on with a conquering laughter,
Come on with a high and conquering laughter.
The long-tailed blackbirds are hoarse.
One of the smaller blackbirds chitters on a stalk
And a spot of red is on its shoulder
And I never heard its name in my life.
Some of the ears are bursting.
A white juice works inside.
Cornsilk creeps in the end and dangles in the wind.
Always — I never knew it any other way—
The wind and the corn talk things over together.
And the rain and the corn and the sun and the corn
Talk things over together.
Over the road is the farmhouse.
The siding is white and a green blind is slung loose.
It will not be fixed till the corn is husked.
The farmer and his wife talk things over together.
Laughing Corn from Cornhuskers by Carl Sandburg as published in The Complete Poems of Carl Sandburg, by Carl Sandburg, Harcourt, Brace, New York, 1950.
Thank you Mike for the “wind & the corn” Haiku note that was prompted by your hearing the news of your cousin Denny’s passing. I’ve always appreciated how you give life to your immediate family memories and feel the same appreciation for your latest edition providing us with brief escort down the memory lane of our extended families’ connections–Denny being an unforgettable place in the family who we all miss.
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