Daggett Street
muggy heat
a sudden awareness
the clock stopped
snuggling under a blanket
of silence
autumn colors
blurring in a swirl of leaves
all the days to come
Modern Haiku, Autumn 2011
One fourth of the yard given to vegetables, one fourth to
grass and a clothesline, one half to a grape arbor. Lilies-of-the-valley and jack o’lanterns grow
in the shadows. Under the thick vines, pieces of linoleum placed over the hard
packed dirt. A rusty metal table and wobbly chairs where Grandma sits shelling
peas or mending, Grandpa drinking a glass of wine made from his own grapes. Me as a toddler, my sister two years older,
playing.
muggy heat
a sudden awareness
the clock stopped
Early morning trucks rumble up the street. The Goodyear factory, a cheese processing
plant, a paper box company–each with its own pick-ups and drop-offs. The noise, the smells. Just part of living on Daggett Street. There are some benefits: in summer, a thirsty group of workers always
willing to buy lemonade from two little girls; in all seasons, brick factory
walls good for tossing balls against.
heavy snowsnuggling under a blanket
of silence
The rooms empty, smaller with the furniture gone. The house in need of paint, the arbor, full
of grapes that will not be picked. The
taxi honks and we depart.
autumn colors
blurring in a swirl of leaves
all the days to come
Modern Haiku, Autumn 2011
3 comments:
charming and endearing a sweet nostalgic photo haibun
much love...
__Always feeling the contrary... I sense -the clock stopped- there, and there... the memories began. _m
Thank you, both, for your comments.
Adelaide
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