No ratings.
A poem about through the eyes of a common man, looking at his old schoolhouse. |
I wanted to pay last respects to an old friend; one who taught me everything. So, I gazed momentarily at the remains of this old schoolhouse, falling from its earliest foundation. Aged timber clearly warped, a feeble stench from the bodies of gray rodents lying across the rickety floorboards. Relics of what used to be life decorated the weed-choked floor like tiny figurines. Parched insects crumble beneath brittle bones, stuffed from a feast long remembered. Silver cobwebs stretched endlessly across rigid beams, scarcely supporting the delicate ceiling. Below the dust-covered roof lie ancient manuscripts, composed to lecture little boys and girls who beheld an unquenchable thirst for knowledge. Here, they would gather together to pray and to write; to read and to memorize the Pledge of Allegiance. Once inked in black markings, but now faded beyond recollection, words and phrases that have been forgotten simply diminish from the hearts and minds of children I was at one time acquainted with. The yielding walls of this establishment, painted in different shades of red, white, and I believe a speck of blue, creaked and moaned in utter pain. I recall so well when I counted backwards on my tiny, pale fingers and attempt to comprehend Newton’s complex law of gravity without ever taking a peek at the book. Its obvious departure above the earth’s soil-ridden ground has come into view, holding dear to the last minutes of its existence. I pushed against the broken door and crossed the molded threshold, inhaled a substantial amount of polluted air. Here is where I say my last goodbye, perhaps a familiar whisper, like others before me- My honorable praise to the last remaining walls of a place I’d rather not remember at all. |