Lachlan Campbell’s Land

This is the home he wants: his own,
chosen twenty years ago
out of a bone-deep need
to fill a glass with water from
his own well and drink his coffee
from his own brown mug. He carved
himself a garden from a matof briars, dug and bent the soil

to his will, soft and submitting.
Everything here is left unvarnished
and no one driving by would notice
this rough house, or half-blind dog.
It’s all for him, whose back and arms
have hewn it out of Ozark dross,
roadside finds, and rough cedar.
He’s made a smoker from a dryer

someone dumped down the hill.
The shed’s built from ripped-up pallets.
He’s cash poor, and he is fierce.
He’s walked this patch of ragged land
a thousand times in hiking boots—
no socks, no shirt, his shoulders burned,
his jaw set, his teeth sunk
in this forgotten piece of earth.

—Anna Stiritz

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Bladee’s Redemptive Rap

Joseph Krug

Georg Friedrich Philipp von Hardenberg, better known by his pen name Novalis, died at the age of…

Postliberalism and Theology

R. R. Reno

After my musings about postliberalism went to the press last month (“What Does “Postliberalism” Mean?”, January 2026),…

Nuns Don’t Want to Be Priests

Anna Kennedy

Sixty-four percent of American Catholics say the Church should allow women to be ordained as priests, according…