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Sweet New England; its where my heart is, and where I belong. I know, the day I left I buried it deep on the western prom of Portland Maine to call me back someday though I may be old and frail when that times comes. And though I am southern born it’s scents, moods, colors and cold have etched themselves like scrimshaw onto my soul. I now want my bones shattered by frost, not left to mildew in the humid southern heat. For me New England’s like warm light shining through frost covered windows, or a cozy, cluttered old room filled with the bric brac of a life long well lived, an attic garret maybe, confined yet comfortable. The rest of the country’s expansive and open except parts of the south where the heat & humidity will smother you in your sleep; then hide the evidence in swamps of ancient illusion like southern hospitality, smiling to your face while sharpening the knife. Offering another helping while grandpa finishes the grave. Ya’ll come back now ya hear. Give me the hidden heart of New England any day; chilly and cool outside but warm as a glowing wood stove. While memory tends to shade everything in afternoon’s golden light or midnight blue and gray, I’d rather hard scrabble times up north than easy living in a place that says nothing to me even if this place is home. I miss Maine so very much, I taste her like a lover in October air rich with the season’s smells of apples, leaves, sea, smoke and pine. Sweet New England; where I belong is where my heart is. And though I wasn’t born there I’ve walked that land as a pilgrim singing its songs as my song until they became my own. My heart reaches out now longing to return, to the place I called home, until the end of days. And my bones not left to mildew in the humid southern heat, shatter with the frost.
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Sep 18, 2011
Sep 18, 2011 at 1:16 PM UTC
New England Love Song
Sweet New England; its where my heart is, and where I belong. I know, the day I left I buried it deep on the western prom of Portland Maine to call me back someday though I may be old and frail when that times comes. And though I am southern born it’s scents, moods, colors and cold have etched themselves like scrimshaw onto my soul. I now want my bones shattered by frost, not left to mildew in the humid southern heat. For me New England’s like warm light shining through frost covered windows, or a cozy, cluttered old room filled with the bric brac of a life long well lived, an attic garret maybe, confined yet comfortable. The rest of the country’s expansive and open except parts of the south where the heat & humidity will smother you in your sleep; then hide the evidence in swamps of ancient illusion like southern hospitality, smiling to your face while sharpening the knife. Offering another helping while grandpa finishes the grave. Ya’ll come back now ya hear. Give me the hidden heart of New England any day; chilly and cool outside but warm as a glowing wood stove. While memory tends to shade everything in afternoon’s golden light or midnight blue and gray, I’d rather hard scrabble times up north than easy living in a place that says nothing to me even if this place is home. I miss Maine so very much, I taste her like a lover in October air rich with the season’s smells of apples, leaves, sea, smoke and pine. Sweet New England; where I belong is where my heart is. And though I wasn’t born there I’ve walked that land as a pilgrim singing its songs as my song until they became my own. My heart reaches out now longing to return, to the place I called home, until the end of days. And my bones not left to mildew in the humid southern heat, shatter with the frost.
This is perpetually a work in progress in which I try and express what my life in  New England and especially in Maine came to mean to me. "Spring Comes to Maine", "In the Birches", "Southern Summers and "Yankee Lasses" were all originally part of this much longer piece.- From Poetry Jam (on Toast)
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Sep 18, 2011
Sep 18, 2011 at 1:16 PM UTC
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