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Summer 2007
This is a free association word prompt.
(response to word prompt underlined in the story)
Memories of a Farm House
Rising up from grasses wet from an early dew,
a wispy mist floated above the gently sloping earth.
Lightening bugs,
like so many twinkling emeralds on black velvet,
had long disappeared,
and a faint outline of the Appalachian Highway
below was just beginning to emerge.
The crow of a rooster,
crying out the arrival of dawn, greeted my ear;
the faint sound of lowing cattle soon followed.
Dogs barking filled the air with a friendly, excited yipping.
The farm was waking up, and soon the hungry clamor
of grunting pigs and neighing horses,
clucking chickens and quacking ducks,
would add their voices to the symphony
of sounds common to a successful farm.
This would be my last visit to my ancestral,
country house atop a hill, this lovely old farm house,
which made my heart rise up to meet it
from the moment I beheld its white, picket gate.
I settled more comfortably into my favorite chair,
slowly set it to rocking with the flick of one
canvas-covered toe,
and reflected on the many years spent sitting here...
right here, on this old, splintered porch.
Like a book of turning pages,
memories rose up, one after the other.
My tree, where I would climb and watch
the gravel road for my mother's car;
the snowball bush, which I would shake,
and then twirl beneath it as if I were in a snow storm;
the rose bushes, their explosive fire-like blooms
blood red against the white of the farm house;
the old oak tree, so wide,
that five of us cousins could not encompass it
when standing around it, hand-in-hand.
Remembering ... remembering:
feather beds, and bowls sitting within pitchers on old,
cracked dressers. The wood burning stove
in the winter kitchen, the pump and the sink,
fresh corn and big, ripe tomatoes,
so huge, one slice filled a plate.
Running through the pastures, swinging on grape vines,
swimming in the creeks;
Mawmaw; Pawpaw; love.
Pictures flashing through my mind,
in a kaleidoscope of images and sounds and smells which,
totaled up and added together, equaled...me.
Rising from my rocker I slowly walked to my car.
Turning, for one, final look,
I realized that I would be writing about this old house...
perhaps for the rest of my life.
Writing to ease my soul,
taking each essay, each poem, each memory,
and placing them in an envelope tied with ribbon,
pressing them forever close to my heart.
©6/23/2007 Debra Shiveley Welch
Click HERE
to visit Debra's personal website.
  
  

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