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It had, so he recalled, no pretensions of being something So grand as a lake; Just a roundish body of water, not particularly suited for diving Nor of any real attraction to a fisherman, Nothing there save the odd chub or sunfish to languidly pull one’s line, Its recreational attributes limited to a postage-stamp size patch of sand And one solitary rope attached to an equally lonely old truck tire, Neither being of guaranteed fitness for the task at hand. He’d gone there for one reason, and one reason only; There’d been a girl, one late spring and a subsequent early fall, And at times they’d gone there on the occasional sunny day, Traversing a twisting two-lane stretch of county road (The blacktop sprinkled with North Country sandstone, Giving it the pinkish hue of a rainbow trout Angrily flopping about on a dock) In order to get waist-deep in the water for a few minutes (The pond never really warm enough To swim in with malice aforethought) Before settling on blankets to drink cokes And eat the sandwiches they’d picked up At the ancient, Mayberry-esque general store just west of town And to speak in hesitant and uncomfortable half-sentences Concerning accidents of birth and death, speculative half-made plans. In the end, it all went no further than talk, At least after the inevitable transition From the fleeting, furtive evenings To the harsh, unremitting light of day. In truth, he’d always had one eye fixed beyond the horizon, Beyond the lumbering, lumpy old Adirondack foothills, Alternately comforting and claustrophobic, All the time paying heed To some some whisper, nagging and ethereal, That all this was simply some momentary way station on the path To something finer, something substantive, some end of the road; He’d no way of knowing that the murmur would remain, Soft yet persistent, long after he’d left that cold cow country, Rumbling on as the calendar proceeded and the hairline receded. His work, as it happened, sometimes carried him To the stark, sparsely populated environs Situated to the north of the Thruway, And he would, almost in spite of himself, concoct some excuse To take himself back out by the old pond, Still unprepossessing, the same tree sporting the rope-and-tire swing (Some descendant of the one he had known, But in the same uneasy state of disrepair), And, now and then, he’d pull off onto the shoulder, Leaving the car to walk down by the water’s edge. On one occasion, he’d had the mad impulse To dive into the water head-first and fully immerse himself, And had gone as far as to take off his shirt and tie. He’d checked himself in the end, of course; There were any number of water-borne nasties Courtesy of beavers and Canada geese, most likely leeches as well. He’d dressed himself, and headed back to the car, Making a note to himself to remember the hair-pin curve Just this side of Hannawa Falls, gruesome stretch of road Which had claimed its share of undergraduates back in his day, And he’d always thought it sad how many bright futures Had tumbled over the guardrails and into the ravine To be held like dark secrets in the underbrush.
0
Feb 15, 2017
Feb 15, 2017 at 2:47 PM UTC
The Pond At South Colton
It had, so he recalled, no pretensions of being something So grand as a lake; Just a roundish body of water, not particularly suited for diving Nor of any real attraction to a fisherman, Nothing there save the odd chub or sunfish to languidly pull one’s line, Its recreational attributes limited to a postage-stamp size patch of sand And one solitary rope attached to an equally lonely old truck tire, Neither being of guaranteed fitness for the task at hand. He’d gone there for one reason, and one reason only; There’d been a girl, one late spring and a subsequent early fall, And at times they’d gone there on the occasional sunny day, Traversing a twisting two-lane stretch of county road (The blacktop sprinkled with North Country sandstone, Giving it the pinkish hue of a rainbow trout Angrily flopping about on a dock) In order to get waist-deep in the water for a few minutes (The pond never really warm enough To swim in with malice aforethought) Before settling on blankets to drink cokes And eat the sandwiches they’d picked up At the ancient, Mayberry-esque general store just west of town And to speak in hesitant and uncomfortable half-sentences Concerning accidents of birth and death, speculative half-made plans. In the end, it all went no further than talk, At least after the inevitable transition From the fleeting, furtive evenings To the harsh, unremitting light of day. In truth, he’d always had one eye fixed beyond the horizon, Beyond the lumbering, lumpy old Adirondack foothills, Alternately comforting and claustrophobic, All the time paying heed To some some whisper, nagging and ethereal, That all this was simply some momentary way station on the path To something finer, something substantive, some end of the road; He’d no way of knowing that the murmur would remain, Soft yet persistent, long after he’d left that cold cow country, Rumbling on as the calendar proceeded and the hairline receded. His work, as it happened, sometimes carried him To the stark, sparsely populated environs Situated to the north of the Thruway, And he would, almost in spite of himself, concoct some excuse To take himself back out by the old pond, Still unprepossessing, the same tree sporting the rope-and-tire swing (Some descendant of the one he had known, But in the same uneasy state of disrepair), And, now and then, he’d pull off onto the shoulder, Leaving the car to walk down by the water’s edge. On one occasion, he’d had the mad impulse To dive into the water head-first and fully immerse himself, And had gone as far as to take off his shirt and tie. He’d checked himself in the end, of course; There were any number of water-borne nasties Courtesy of beavers and Canada geese, most likely leeches as well. He’d dressed himself, and headed back to the car, Making a note to himself to remember the hair-pin curve Just this side of Hannawa Falls, gruesome stretch of road Which had claimed its share of undergraduates back in his day, And he’d always thought it sad how many bright futures Had tumbled over the guardrails and into the ravine To be held like dark secrets in the underbrush.
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Feb 15, 2017
Feb 15, 2017 at 2:47 PM UTC
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