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The girls had just come in from gathering fuel, Laid the frozen cow pats in the box Beside the stove, Went in to wash for supper. The old house creaked beneath a towering wind Gray-full of promise that driving snow was on the way, But though it shook, the shingles stayed; The smoldering fire warmed and cheered The children as they stamped their feet to chase the cold away, Hands outstretched to catch the radiant heat. A distant cloud of war in Europe loomed, Sinister, though far, the children vaguely knew, By catching whispered grown up conversations.... Though not yet reality for German-Russian Mennonites Now Montana farmers on the eastern plains To which they'd run to find a peaceful space To settle far from persecution. Before the supper washing and the setting of the plates, Grandmother moved to catch the evening news, Turned a dial to set the tubes aglow And warm the wireless magic in the radio. Crackling to life, a man's voice said, "Achtung!" Early winter, 1938 on Montana's wind-blown plains, The evening news presented Hitler's venomed speech Declaring war and warnings and impending dooms. Mesmerized, my German grandma stood, Suddenly cold inside the warm kitchen, Staring out the window toward the barn, Tears running down her cheeks, Her children gathered round. "Mama! Mama! What is the matter?" My mother begged to know, tugged upon her mother's apron, Wondered at the power of words To make her mother cry. "That man has terrible power!" Was all my grandma said, trying to be calm, Then turning back to ready table Before the men came in for supper. Seventy-five years later, Sitting at the kitchen table on the farm, My mother's voice trails off... ****** and her mother... How many millions gone? Powerful within the room, The memory rests. Outside, the same wind blows; Only absent snow-gray clouds Beneath the ice-blue skies.
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Nov 10, 2013
Nov 10, 2013 at 1:02 PM UTC
1938
The girls had just come in from gathering fuel, Laid the frozen cow pats in the box Beside the stove, Went in to wash for supper. The old house creaked beneath a towering wind Gray-full of promise that driving snow was on the way, But though it shook, the shingles stayed; The smoldering fire warmed and cheered The children as they stamped their feet to chase the cold away, Hands outstretched to catch the radiant heat. A distant cloud of war in Europe loomed, Sinister, though far, the children vaguely knew, By catching whispered grown up conversations.... Though not yet reality for German-Russian Mennonites Now Montana farmers on the eastern plains To which they'd run to find a peaceful space To settle far from persecution. Before the supper washing and the setting of the plates, Grandmother moved to catch the evening news, Turned a dial to set the tubes aglow And warm the wireless magic in the radio. Crackling to life, a man's voice said, "Achtung!" Early winter, 1938 on Montana's wind-blown plains, The evening news presented Hitler's venomed speech Declaring war and warnings and impending dooms. Mesmerized, my German grandma stood, Suddenly cold inside the warm kitchen, Staring out the window toward the barn, Tears running down her cheeks, Her children gathered round. "Mama! Mama! What is the matter?" My mother begged to know, tugged upon her mother's apron, Wondered at the power of words To make her mother cry. "That man has terrible power!" Was all my grandma said, trying to be calm, Then turning back to ready table Before the men came in for supper. Seventy-five years later, Sitting at the kitchen table on the farm, My mother's voice trails off... ****** and her mother... How many millions gone? Powerful within the room, The memory rests. Outside, the same wind blows; Only absent snow-gray clouds Beneath the ice-blue skies.
Based on several conversations with my 85 year old mother about her experience of hearing Hitler's speech on American radio, 1938.
don-bouchard
Written by
66/M/American
Nov 10, 2013
Nov 10, 2013 at 1:02 PM UTC
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