Showing posts with label south carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south carolina. Show all posts

Monday, July 15, 2013

Canoeing the Edisto

Slipped like a turtle off a log
and skimmed down the Edisto--

water like coffee,
churning just a bit muddy--

maidenflies and dragonflies
the only other traffic--

breathing air threshed
through the river reeds,
fresher than the city breeze.

I laugh aloud
at silvery fish
darting skyward
and diving as neatly
as a pocketknife collapses
upon itself.

Wood ducks scare from the reeds
at paddles' splash,
a flash in the blue sky,
heedless flight;
they squawk like giggling girls
reeling in some silly fright.

Left behind among the arum
and lavender pickerelweed,
white spider lilies gleam
like pristine snowflakes at the river's edge.

For just a while
I dally through rice canals,
aged trunks* a silent reminder
that once a lively trade
was plied here.

Again upon the river main,
flushed with exertion
against a sudden headwind,
I seek shelter beneath two towering trees--

the cypress,
draped in Spanish moss like tinsel,
branches swaying in the wind.

I wish I too could rise like the cypress,
high above the river,
and call to the herons and egrets
and owls.

Too soon I have come full circle;
the beachhead is busy, peopled.
I'm tempted to glide past,
to return to the solitary quiet of the river.

But the Edisto will stay with me,
filed with memories of other rivers,
and mountains, and meadows
which I will cull
whenever life becomes
too real, too fast, or too crowded.


klsmith

Monday, August 9, 2010

Chicken Stew

Life in a Small Town



By Kathleen L. Smith
All rights reserved


Driving home on our country highway that connects all the railroad towns of South Carolina, AC blowing through my thin hair, radio blaring, me singing at the top of my lungs an old country tune, I came upon a fine white leghorn in the middle of the road. I didn’t know it was a “leghorn” at the time. Then it was a big white chicken with a red coxcomb looking rather perplexed, as if it had forgotten why it had begun to cross the road, and I could relate to that, there having been times when I also wondered why I had persisted on a particular course of action in life.

I realized in a flash of sudden brilliant insight that if I veered around that chicken and continued on my journey that, most likely, it would never see the morrow, and that saddened me. For to me, life is a religion, not something I go to worship in church so much as to connect the meaningful dots of my own existence. As such all living things have a value for me. I stopped the car there in the right lane of the two-lane highway, scanning the rear view mirror at several cars a quarter of a mile back.

Honk. Honk. Honk---honk--honk.

The bird gave me a worried look and budged not.

Throwing open the car door with a sigh and a glance at the cars now stopped behind me, I walked up to the chicken and, using my “official I-mean-this” voice commanded, “Shoo!” The bird looked at me. I looked at the bird. “Shoo. Shoo.” The heat index for the day was 105 to 110, and I could feel the searing heat rising from the macadam beneath my shoes. The leghorn was probably suffering heat prostration. It looked more confused even than I often feel at two in the afternoon of a July day in the South.

Having already committed myself to this wild chicken chase, I realized I would have to physically remove the bird from the road. With a somewhat embarrassed glance at the cars behind me, I could see the passengers all leaning to the right and left side windows of their cars, all intensely interested in my pursuit. Putting that in the shadowed back of my mind, I took a determined breath and grabbed the chicken on both sides, simultaneously wondering if this was my day to be pecked to death.

Two cars zoomed by, passing none too far away in the left lane of the highway, impatient to reach their destinations as I idled my time in chicken rescue. I placed the leghorn, who by this time seemed content with my decision to remove it, to a location where I deemed it safe from encounters of the automotive kind and trotted quickly to my car. I had left the door standing widely open. Hopping behind the steering wheel, as I closed the car door, I thought I heard the muffled sound of applause mixed with laughter emitting from the car behind me. I sped off into an imaginary sunset, the gleaming star of glory pinned to my chest, blinking back a tear for a fait accompli. Such is the stuff of life for one in a small town.