Wednesday, August 16, 2023

There I Am

by Sarah Dickenson Snyder

 
Walking on the leaf littered eternity
of Central Avenue, the queen of my neighborhood
past one stone castle & that Victorian house
where I first watched The Wizard of Oz
on the only color TV on that street.
I sat under a side table holding hands
with Nancy, those flying monkeys still wildfire
in my heart, & didn't one doctor say I had a heart
murmur & don't I often hear the murmur
of what I can't name. How close we all were
to the manatees in the clear water,
one looking me in the eye.
Nothing is hard to love up close.
I don't need a guidebook, but I've had to
dust off my report cards and the stacks of black
& white scalloped-edged photographs
uncover some code of dots and dashes
I didn't hear. I’m a detective now.
No longer the luckiest one.
There must be a trail & stone cairns.
My strong legs when my father asked me
to carry his backpack, My knees, he said.
It was heavy, yes, but I carried it all the way down.
That was another year that I was born.
I miss the swell of twilight, running home
and knowing dinner would be ready soon.


* * * * *
 
Sarah Dickenson Snyder lives in Vermont, carves in stone, & rides her bike. Travel opens her eyes. She has four poetry collections, The Human Contract (2017), Notes from a Nomad (nominated for the Massachusetts Book Awards 2018), With a Polaroid Camera (2019), and Now These Three Remain (2023). Poems have been nominated for Best of Net and Pushcart Prizes. Recent work is in RattleLily Poetry Review, and RHINO
sarahdickensonsnyder.com

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