A free verse poem remembering my boyhood summers. |
As a young boy, I lived for summers – those glorious, hot months when school was out, when I could sleep late, then play outside all day. Back then, I didn’t mind the heat. Instead, I embraced it, spending my day sans shirt and shoes, barefoot and happy, tanned a golden bronze from head to toes, except for the hideously white area covered by my shorts. Our house in Macon had a dirt backyard, shaded by a towering chinaberry tree. Three neighboring boys my age were my constant companions in fun. We played whiffleball baseball for hours on end, raced our bikes up and down the block, and looked for the odd mischief to engage in. Several times a week, one of the mothers would drive us to the public swimming pool for the afternoon. And then there were those watermelon or ice cream treats to cool off those afternoons’ nineties degree Georgia heat. At day’s end, I‘d have to submit to a pre-supper bath to wash away the day’s sticky sweat and layer of backyard dirt. Nightly I wore a dirt necklace in the creases of my neck. My summertime hair cut was a crewcut for its practicality and convenience of washing. You could measure the fun I had had by the amount of dirt going down the drain in the bathwater nightly. Those were happy, carefree times that all too quickly I outgrew, my attention turning to cars, girls, and earning spending money instead. Now I see those wonderful childhood summers reborn once more in my grandchildren. I can only hope they enjoy living them as much as I did. Please check out my ten books: http://www.amazon.com/Jr.-Harry-E.-Gilleland/e/B004SVLY02/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0 |