Thinking back about my uncle's farm. |
| From patches of childhood memory I see the narrow driveway leading to my uncle's farm; it slipped down through a shallow field at the very western edge of Ohio. I see blurs of the hayloft in the drafty, red barn, of the meandering meadow, of the slate roof on the tiny house. A heavy snow would impose a hardship on my uncle; the farm sat far from the road. Across the green and flowing grasses of summer you could see the turnpike towards the horizon. An old tractor slumped in furrows of knee-deep weeds, a pale, yellow relic tilling fall silhouettes. There were many fascinating things to do, many things to see, yet much of what I did and saw are forgotten. Only a few farm-patches are visible, like stalks of malnourished grass peeking up through the snow. 27 Lines Writer’s Cramp 8-3-20 |