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When ever I touch the ground that’s hot With the sole of my foot that’s bare, I never fail to recall a time, And the memories lingering there, Of a day when I was just a boy, Beneath equatorial skies, And the tactic used to keep me indoors While the missionaries rested their eyes. My mother was sick with malaria The curse of the tropic zone, And while my dad was away on the hunt Their station became our home. And after lunch when the sky was hot And the morning’s work was done They took my shoes away from me To keep me out of the sun. The veranda air was still as a grave, Not a sound to could be heard outside Save the click-click-click from the beetles And the grasshoppers jumping to hide. Or the scratching scaly slither, Of a snake on the flowerbed verge, Or the distant cry of the crested crane, These are the sounds that merge. The sight of the distant Koru hills Shimmering in the haze Beyond the frangipani trees Return once more to my gaze, And the prickly spiky Crown of Thorns That lined the garden ways, These are the sights that ribbon back From my early Kenyan days. The smell of the room was a mixture Of scents on the garden air, And creosote coming up through the floor From the pilings under there, And paraffin from the pressure lamps Which hissed as they gave us light. With the hint of oil of pyrethrum Sprayed round the eves at night. The step to my door should I venture At noon was as hot as a stove, The soil on the paths and driveway Would burn if ever I strove. And the thorns in the earth would pr ick me As I cautiously picked my way through To the shade of the frangipani tree, From there I took in the view. So, when ever I touch the ground that’s hot With the sole of my foot that’s bare, I never fail to recall a time, And the memory lingering there, Of a day when I was just a boy, Where the images I find, Set smells and sights and sounds of Africa sizzling in my mind. Redding, California July 4th 2005 temperature 105° Fahrenheit
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May 11, 2017
May 11, 2017 at 4:32 PM UTC
The Hot Earth
When ever I touch the ground that’s hot With the sole of my foot that’s bare, I never fail to recall a time, And the memories lingering there, Of a day when I was just a boy, Beneath equatorial skies, And the tactic used to keep me indoors While the missionaries rested their eyes. My mother was sick with malaria The curse of the tropic zone, And while my dad was away on the hunt Their station became our home. And after lunch when the sky was hot And the morning’s work was done They took my shoes away from me To keep me out of the sun. The veranda air was still as a grave, Not a sound to could be heard outside Save the click-click-click from the beetles And the grasshoppers jumping to hide. Or the scratching scaly slither, Of a snake on the flowerbed verge, Or the distant cry of the crested crane, These are the sounds that merge. The sight of the distant Koru hills Shimmering in the haze Beyond the frangipani trees Return once more to my gaze, And the prickly spiky Crown of Thorns That lined the garden ways, These are the sights that ribbon back From my early Kenyan days. The smell of the room was a mixture Of scents on the garden air, And creosote coming up through the floor From the pilings under there, And paraffin from the pressure lamps Which hissed as they gave us light. With the hint of oil of pyrethrum Sprayed round the eves at night. The step to my door should I venture At noon was as hot as a stove, The soil on the paths and driveway Would burn if ever I strove. And the thorns in the earth would pr ick me As I cautiously picked my way through To the shade of the frangipani tree, From there I took in the view. So, when ever I touch the ground that’s hot With the sole of my foot that’s bare, I never fail to recall a time, And the memory lingering there, Of a day when I was just a boy, Where the images I find, Set smells and sights and sounds of Africa sizzling in my mind. Redding, California July 4th 2005 temperature 105° Fahrenheit
As a boy I was raised in Kenya, and our first home was way up country in a place called Koru. My father’s work took him away from home on extended hunting trips. During one of these absences my mother had a bout of malaria, and we went to stay at a mission station run by the Röetikinen sisters. I believe they were Lutheran missionaries. At mid-day when the day was hottest, they always rested, and they wanted us children to stay in our room and be still. They confined us there by taking away our shoes.
neil-s-mcleod
Written by
70/M/Los Angeles
May 11, 2017
May 11, 2017 at 4:32 PM UTC
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