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DEAR BROTHERS AND SISTERS
I sometimes think I'm slipping Or maybe growing old, When slow the warmth of Springtime Dispels the Winter's cold; And memories of yesterday Are bright and clear and keen; But recent happenings are dim, As through a mist are seen.
I see the old home as it stood When I was but a boy; When homely ways provided An ever present joy. The livestock and the growing grain All sprang from the good earth; And chained my fancy then and now, The miracle of birth.
The apple-orchard to the east, The red and golden fruit; The cherries rip'ning on the trees, The jaybird's juicy loot; The garden where the rhubarb grew, Asparagus and beans; And ah the thrill deep in my heart With Mother boiling greens.
The water in Mosquito Creek, Deliberate and slow; And oft I wondered, "Where oh where Did all that water go". The catfish biting in the shade Down 'neath the tangled drift That lay secure by the old footlog; E'en now I get a lift.
For memories of Mother there, The fishworm's wriggling crooks; And my amazement then and now. She never lost her hooks. Just to the west of the fallen tree, The big boys' solemn role To plumb the depths of the water deep Of the "Old Swimmin' Hole".
The thrills on thrills when first I found, (For adjectives I grope) The priceless arrowheads, and rare, Out west upon the slope. The flintrocks lying there exposed, It was a wondrous life When great, big, liquid sparks of fire Were struck by Dad's old knife.
The rolling fields across the road Were landscaped to the south; The great dewberries by the hedge For boyhood's ardent mouth. The pond just south and to the east, A special sort of bog, And springtime ev'nings pulsing with The music of the frogs.
But as the sun sank in the west And came the ev'ning breeze With mottled shadows on the grass Beneath the maple trees: And pickets standing at salute, And ever prim and white; And mounting guard as sentinels As fell the summer night.
Now, as I step into the rooms Where as a lad I stood; And often pondered questions deep, 'Tween evil and the good. And now I know, far, far away Are the yesterdays I knew; But firm and steadfast in my heart, The old 'twined with the new.
My memories; both pain and joy Were taken in our stride; For at the helm our parents stood, Our course to chart and guide. Not one of us has climbed the heights As others may have done, Nor sunk to dark and dismal depths; Yet, vict'ries we have won.
And now, today, the years have gone. Life holds few mysteries. A living present in our hearts, We've more than memories. We've lived our lives. The time not long For making history; And numbered days, soon you and I Will be a memory.
But Brothers, Sisters don't forget, That "Short or long our way, We have a glorious present, Thank God, we have today". We've brought down with us through the years A faith to hold, to cheer; And see the smiling face of God; Tomorrow shining clear.
Howard May 31, 1952
Copyright ©2002 Austin & Associates. All rights reserved. Howard B. Austin's writings are provided on this site for your pleasure. Those who visit are not granted permission to copy or distribute any of these writings without written permission.
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