my love of the Old South is evident in this haunting poem |
On a trip to Louisiana, I left a piece of my soul, the romantic magic that lives on the levee. There, by the snake brown water of the Mississippi, is a poetic adventure that visits me in dreams. We were on a history trip, trying to find the grand old south. Not the kind where you pay and stand behind ropes, where a sweet old black man tells you lies of Gone with the Wind. I wanted to find the real ruins to satisfy the senses and feed my imagination. We found a grand old lady overgrown in an oil field. My heart ignored ”Do Not Trespass” warnings. A crumbling giant stood with an inviting stage for my characters. A façade, the ruins breath a captivating eerie quality. Here were days of glory and riches, followed by long nights of slaughter and disaster. I picked my way through an empty doorway, I heard the whispers from an age long ago. I tried the crumbling steps and twisted my ankle. I felt a silken gown brush past me on her way up the stairs. Beauty transcends decay, tender wrinkles of time. All lost in a pattern of light and shadows from yesterdays. The mighty Mississippi flows on, eroding the banks; the destroyer, the serpentine. She continues through magnolia moonlight nights, ghosts of fears and joys forever haunt us. By Kathie Stehr edited 2012 |