Batter up
I watched you in the yard
by the gravel driveway
swinging that thirty-five inches of oak flooring.
You’d toss a small white rock from the driveway
and swat it out of sight.
You could stand there for hours.
“Batting rocks,” you called it.
Your “bat” was chewed on one end by all those rocks
that you sent soaring beyond our sight
and smoothed by strong hands and sweat
on the other end.
Did you see the hayloft of the old barn
as Fenway Park’s left field wall?
The barn’s tin roof as Yankee Stadium’s parapets?
Or were you only thinking
of the limits life gave you
the smallness of the town
the lack of opportunities.
No talent scouts or position coaches
were there to bring out your potential.
In the evening twilight you’d stand out there
swinging, swinging,
the crack of rock against wood the only sound.
It could not have been for conditioning
that you smacked at rocks with a puny stick.
If not daydreams of baseball greatness
what kept you there in that side yard by the gravel drive?
Were you planning your escape or striking back
at smooth igneous rocks that could blast your frustrations
over that old barn and far beyond?
The rocks are gone, covered by asphalt.
The house where we shared a room is also gone.
But when I hear the crack of a bat, I still see you
tossing white rocks and batting them over the barn.
7/29/15
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The Long Drive
Those days and miles must have been long
in the days when interstates were not on the maps.
The two-lane roads stretched to the tree-lined horizon
and trudged through towns more squalid than quaint
with their stoplights and speed traps.
You found your way through turns left and right
mandated by numbers and arrows and the occasional word.
At first just the two of you and your simmering
impatience,
then the children, added 1, 2, 3, 4 in rapid succession,
requiring larger cars to haul the family over all those
miles.
And return home with a trunk full of Cheerwine.
You must have left early to arrive by mid-afternoon
at the house where you grew up,
its residents running outside to greet you
as you stiffly emerged from the car after eight or nine
hours.
We made that trip at least once before I could drive
speeding through the night with packed food and drinks,
the static on the radio the only thing keeping us awake
as we traveled those same two lanes in the other
direction.
In rural darkness I searched for stars and the Milky Way.
It would have been easy for you to stay close to home,
to vacation with your children at a nearby beach or park.
Instead, you showed them whence you came,
a little house flanked by fields and woods
that you knew by sight and sound and smell and feel
in a world held together by parents we all had left
behind.
Your road trips showed those children your fiery
impatience
and also your loyalty, compassion and love.
July 25, 2016
Thank you, Hal. I always appreciate your sharing times on the farm or with my Dad. - Sean
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