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A Brief Career of Fire

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A daughter watches as her father
loads stovewood on a kind of February
day that itches for renunciating spring
as winter breaks and enters like a sting.
Dad rolls down his frame at his back.
His little girl standing by, watches
forming her thoughts. He lets slip
Lemme see, a thought with breathy lip
when considering stovewood as judge
of something. Stove door opens
coal warms his Lemme see echoing.
There might be something happening
to let him fit more pieces to pack it.
Some assurance. Hope in movements
after such a slight phrase for ancient
ritual—springhope that lags and fades
inside the chest. The cold won’t tire.
It urges on a brief career of fire.




William Rieppe Moore is from Richland County, South Carolina and moved to Unicoi County, Tennessee with his wife. He resumed teaching high school English after earning an MA in English from East Tennessee State University. Moore’s poetry has received various honors, including Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net nominations as well as finalist honors in the Ron Rash Award in Poetry and second place in the George Scarbrough Prize for Poetry. His poems appear in Driftwood, Blue Earth Review, Appalachian Places, James Dickey Review, North American Review, Terrain.org, and most recently in River Heron Review.