Month: May 2019

  • RIVERWOODS POEMS: HAND ME DOWNS

                        Hand Me Downs

    My husband was a small town Indiana boy

    Who heard the lonely whistle of the train

    Just down the street and watched the glowworms

    Dance above the seas of cornfields lapping

    At his door.  The eldest son, at the age of twelve

    He drove a tractor on his uncle’s farm.

    In the village school his father was the principal.

    His mother put small stitches into quilts

    And watered African violets with her tears.

    Chickens, bees and gardens fed them for the year

    Along with fallen fruit and Uncle Paul’s

    Pork and goat milk.  Nothing went to waste.

    So when a research scientist, he built a woodland

    House, cleared trails and planted raised-bed 

    Gardens fertilized by red worm-generated compost.

    Gardens and chickens were carried on by his son

    An engineer who felt the family heritage was worth

    Preserving and perhaps even passing on.