In a Yard of Fallen Yellow Peaches I Am Listening by Andrew Hemmert
Those radio towers reaching like the hands of fruit harvesters
In a Yard of Fallen Yellow Peaches I Am Listening
to a construction worker singing along loudly with his scratchy little radio, and I am in love with everything. Even the wasps drinking the rotting fruit at my feet. Even how each blow from the hammer jolts through me and my solitude, though what even is solitude in a world of cellular phones and satellites? I am thinking the arrays orbiting miles over my head look like frilled dragons with their neck skin spread out wide signaling not fear but music. And the construction worker’s music relies on a simpler signal. Those radio towers reaching like the hands of fruit harvesters into a heaven that aspires to, but cannot match, a peach tree in full ripeness dropping its blushing stars into the mulch. Cannot match this hope of going on, a stranger hard at work and singing.
First published in The Missouri Review (Issue 48.2, 2025)




