Rusty cans and unknown skeletons Once useful in structure and convenience Now sculpture the red clay and pine knots Of the hidden gateway to the backwoods.
My memory loses the battle With a toy cash register whose numbers Still shine black on white and flash higher As they display, and the bells jingle.
Tires and more tires carry worn treads With water greasy from time and natureβs Slow and steady return to her own way Sloshing willingly into my shoes.
Mats of old shingles once weathering Storms and sunshine now lie quietly Clinging to one another like lost children Cowering in their barren vacuum of loneliness.
Old men with tales of battles And stories of crops, and cattle, and kings Probably sat in that old chair With whittled arms and broken legs.
Sporadic visits teach a wondering history More mystical and convincing Than the fact-riddled pages of tomorrowβs assignment Or the tainted explanations of our teachers.