It was a bunch of mulch piles,
I think,
our fort.
But perfect.
We even built a bathroom,
and kept it freshly stocked with
leaf toilet paper.
Sometimes,
the newspaper shed was unlocked.
We'd climb the
mountain stack,
and slide to the bottom.
The ink,
long dry,
wouldn't stain our knees,
just drench the stale air with its smell.
Once,
in the woods,
we just sat down and started digging.
We weren't pirates that day,
but still found a treasure horde:
old mason jars, chipped porcelain, leather shoes, a calcified stirrup.
We'd perfected how to climb
their fences
without barbed wire snags.
And we knew just how
fast to run
through the field to still have time
to avoid the cow patties.
At our creek,
we'd swing from the tree branches,
and catch tadpoles in the murky water.
At our river,
we'd slide off the rocks,
mermaids.
© Miranda Hogan, 2013
At Our River Photo by Tony Russell |
1 comment:
Wonderful poem, wonderful memories!
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