
originally written in the spring of 2014 for a class.
“I’m going for a walk,” I say
no one bothers to ask where
it’s quite obvious
the only place I’d go
down “the lane”
as it’s affectionately called
I walk past the barn, red paint peeling
doors I’ve only ever peeked through
it smelled musty and old,
one huff, one puff
it’d all fall down
I walk past the faded blue tractor
parked near that old abandoned house
my cousin once whispered, “It’s haunted!”
I laughed.
There’s the giant puddle I side step,
its chasm permanent
I trip over that damn tree root
jutting out of the uneven, dusty earth
dirt so soft it’s sand
My sandals surf on waves,
the wake of a century of tractors
cruising down this path
Once I sat here all afternoon
rock digging
I kept the rainbow one
certain it was worth millions
still in a wooden box my grandma gave me
somewhere
I look left, into dark woods and shrubbery
a border I’ve never crossed,
as if an invisible glass wall encased this exhibit,
preserving the dangerous conglomeration
of scrap metal, old lawn mowers, and chicken wire
peer deeper—more reverently
and tombstones appear
marking a car graveyard, with stories forgotten
but that particular one
always catches my eye
Mint green, its back tattooed in beautiful font
“a u t o m o b i l e”
it sits, dreaming of bygone days
Past these last artifacts,
the forest ends
as if afraid to venture on,
into the ferocious openness
with nothing to hide
or hide behind
I see, in the open
my grandad’s tractor
remembering when
I’m seven
and it’s rained for 40 days
I’m cold, drenched,
I don’t care about seeing
my grandad’s new Steiger
huge and bright green,
blooming
like a giant, neon bush
just past the lane
My brothers blaze ahead
and, I can’t be outdone,
so
through the thick, slick goop
one more step and I’m there
My boot goes on strike—
it stays suctioned behind—
I wobble and…
headfirst
fall!
with my leg in the air—
importantly keeping my one sock clean
I walk towards the aged tractor
sitting alone
mud couldn’t stop me now
but my shoes slide easily
over the wrinkled earth
I try, but can’t forget that winter
I’m 17, braving artic blasts
watching the snow
tucking the earth to sleep
not daring to leave the trees
not daring to leap the void
where the wind whips until
tears fall and freeze
Silently watching
the faded green Steiger,
still and unmoving
where my grandpa
last parked it
already a permanent fixture
a relic of the past
I’m 20, back from college,
visiting grandma, it hurts to say
just grandma
I’m taking I walk I say
no one bothers to ask where
I go down the lane
and stand where the vast land opens up
miles and miles of untamed sky
I fill my parched lungs with that cold, fresh air
hear the roar of the earth’s silence,
watch wind leaving footprints over the grass
Here where the forest ends, my world opens
it’s summer
a tractor’s in the field, windmills dance
I reach down and put some rich black dirt
in a jar
then turning,
walk back to the house
3 replies on ““the Lane””
Sarah, this is gorgeous! Your imagery is so alive and beautiful. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you, Krystiana! 🙂
What a beautiful poem to immortalize your memories! I think my favorite image is the “automobile” dreaming of bygone days…and the snow tucking the earth to bed…and…. I like it all–thanks for sharing!