When I was a child, I had a sanctuary, a hideaway. |
There was a little town that I used to know. We had pretty little houses in a neat little row. And while the summer sun hung high, I'd peek out my front door, equipped with flip flops and a smile for what Outside had in store. The pavement was hot, the sky was bright blue. The field across the street was swaying as I searched for someplace new. Sparrows sang and poppies danced as I stumbled my way by, over rolling hills and meadows green, guided by a butterfly. Then before me rose a forest, and I waved at the man in the leaves. Spirits were draped over every branch-- so a child's mind perceives. I took a timid step forward, quickly engulfed by the shade. Nature whispered songs to me, told me not to be afraid. As I ventured ever onward, through tangles of emerald breath, not once did I glance behind me to the other world I'd left. Never had I felt so tiny, surrounded by ancient souls, as they stretched their leafy limbs so high and laughed at tales of old. Never had I felt so at home as when I snuggled into the grass, as when the sunlight filtered down on a place where time never passed. I once knew of a forest, where I spent many a childhood day. I once knew of an ancient land, and I called it Hideaway |