This is a homecoming poem only in the sense that I had returned to the place where I grew up.
There were no welcoming crowds, no band ... and I hadn't expected any. I had walked around town, looking for a familiar face, but found none. I ended up at the site of the bridge where a frightening experience had etched itself on my memory.
And how frightening a steam locomotive could be to a youngster, especially up close, as my grandmother and I were caught walking across that bridge ... with a freight train passing underneath.
Standing there, alone, brought that memory rushing back to me.
How quiet now! How calm. How vivid the memory of those cinders "dancing" on the deck of that bridge! I just had to write about it.
It later received recognition as a Plainsongs Award Poem, published in their October, 2005, issue.
HOW THE CINDERS DANCED
Cold, I stand recalling
how the cinders danced
on the highway bridge
while I watched a slowly
swaying freight train
creaking beneath us,
its dark, hulking engine
chuffing like a dragon,
hot cinders swirling
up, dark clouds seeking
the walkway, our lungs;
how my hand lingered
in Grandma's after that
frightening train had
gone clacking off, and I
stand here now, alone,
a stranger come home,
breathing clear air,
no cinders dancing, no
engine chuffing, but
my gloved hand rising
to a sudden welling up
that causes a blurring
of childhood images.
© 2005
Today's word: chuffing
(OK, so I made up the word, but that's how I remember the sound that the steam engine made as it struggled underneath the bridge. Oh, and the art? One of my photographs ... and, no, that's not the bridge mentioned in the poem; it's a Nature-provided "bridge" along the trail at one of my favorite walking places.)
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