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hometown traditions... |
The seasoned piper fills his lungs then blows the bag to bloat - bleeding out a squeeze of sad as mourners haul and tote. For summer’s ships are sailing home in cars now packed with sand, that trickles through life’s hour glass And passes hand to hand. "Here - Josie touched her first real wave. There – Johnny surfed with pride. And here the twins grinned sweetly from one teacup twirling ride". "A fish the size of Moby Dick! We fought - but bought just these", to fabled feasts of crabs and beer for friends who shared our seas. And as the piper pipes them on, we bravely wave goodbye concealing what we truly feel as crocodiles cry. But as the soundstage Falls away our humble lives begin easing out of costumed roles and artificial skins. Poisson au poivre is gone for good replaced by fish/chick/steaks, smells of goodness emanate - “As baked by Jacque” – now Jake's. And here beside this shift of tide the piper takes a swig - while locals weep to watch them go then dance a joyful jig. And now shops close and meters stop as berries turn to seed, each golden rod lures purple finch whose swarm now swoops to feed. Traffic jams are migrant birds patrolled by just one fox, while windowed doors are left ajar, keys resting in their locks. Lifeguard stands get rolled away, the signs come from the fence - those cautions of the obvious replaced by common sense. Cotton candied sweetness fades displaced by steeping teas, as well worn paths are now erased - we roam where’er we please. The crowds of geese now honk and land upon the fields at night to turn the stubbled harvest corn from umbered orange to white. The egrets rest in groves of pines like tissues in a breeze and earth erupts in coloured blaze that burns from aging leaves. So play your mournful tune, kind sir. and let the mournful cry – But, come next year I hope you’ll pipe them out in mid-July! |