On Summer Days Like This
I remember the six of us –
piling into a Chrysler,
a cooler packed with colas
and bologna stashed in the trunk.
We’d drive to Daddy’s old farm,
before his parents sold it and moved
to town. Park along the road and
hike through the undergrowth
carrying that cooler between us.
The farm sat untouched for years.
The owners dead or in a home. Their
children miles away from caring.
Down we walked the overgrown roadbed,
a remnant of tracks that led to their house,
now gone.
Past the tree Daddy said
he and granddaddy slaughtered goats.
I could almost hear the bleating, almost
see the blood, dried long ago.
On we walked, over fallen limbs,
dodging briers in the stand of cedars.
We’d come back to them in December.
When, if we were lucky, snow would fall
as we chose the perfect tree
to sit in the living room corner,
covered in tinsel and hope.
Sweat would trickle down our necks
by the time we finally reached our Blue Hole,
a pool of sparkling green, not blue.
Trees stood high above it –
filtered light danced upon the water,
and summer heat vanished as we
stepped in letting the water rise above
our knees.
Let the cold catch our breath as water rose
to our chests.
Schools of small minnows
flickered away. Water skippers
skated on their arachnid legs.
Here, Daddy told us, he and his boyhood
friends came to swim in their summers.
I sometimes thought I could hear echoes
of his laughter in the leaves
and the moss-covered sandstone.
Now, so many summers past,
I wonder if bits of our laughter
can be heard there, too,
among the cedars, or lifting
from a spring- fed pool where
minnows flicker in filtered light.
16 thoughts on "On Summer Days Like This"
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
such a nice trip down memory lane with vivid details.
Thank you, Linda!
Such a wonderful mix of sights, sounds, smells! I felt like I was with you walking the land. So well done!
Thanks so much, Sylvia!
This is a beautiful recollection of times past. I love
“I sometimes thought I could hear echoes
of his laughter in the leaves
and the moss-covered sandstone.”
So glad you enjoyed it, Virginia. Thank you!
Great sensory details meshed with memory. I especially liked:
I could hear echoes
of his laughter in the leaves
and the moss-covered sandstone.
That is lovely. Thank you for sharing this poem!
Thank you for your support, E.E.!
Beautiful memories, beautifully recalled.
Thank you, Kevin!
So cinematic! With such rich imagery. Your poems of the past, of family, are wonderful.
I love the sounds, especially in the “echoes / of his laughter in . . .” and you, as you, “wonder if bits of our laughter / can be heard there, too, / among . . .”
(I’m sure it can.)
Thank you, friend!
Enjoyed “piling into a Chrysler” and going on this ride!
Haha. Glad you liked it!
Moving and storied piece of writing!
Thank you, Shaun. I worried it was too much story, and not enough poem.