attempting to throw 1000 words at a pic... |
Grandpa John ran the hay blade
all day long in the hot August sun harvesting the river bottom grass. Swaths of bright green stalks fell to lie and die upon the field; drying, slowly drying. The aroma was rich in my nose as I wandered to the bank overlooking the Androscoggin, so low this time of year. The water a mere trickle compared to the springtime deluge that races along. Grandpa John died in 1986 and the bank took back the old farm and fields he had been barely holding onto. I remember a bald auctioneer's head and an old hay rake gleaming dully in the hot August sun. His life and dreams were shown, upon a block and sold for pittance by a fast talking man with a gavel. The river watched with indifference, another silent spectator moving slowly along. In the hot August sun I came to visit the old farm, Expecting knee deep grass in fields where I played as a child. Instead of the open glen, I saw driveways, street lights, telephone poles and electric wires from the highway to the bank of the old Androscoggin. I wondered if the river measures time and progress, or even worries about people as it goes moving slowly along. |