The Read Online Free
  • Latest Novel
  • Hot Novel
  • Completed Novel
  • Popular Novel
  • Author List
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Young Adult
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Encounter in a Small Old Cemetery

    Previous Page Next Page

    Encounter in a Small Old Cemetery

      By Lenny Everson

      rev 1

      Copyright Lenny Everson 2011

      This free ebook may be copied, distributed, reposted, reprinted and shared, provided it appears in its entirety without alteration, and the reader is not charged to access it.

      Cover design by Lenny Everson

      ****

      Note:

      A few years ago Dianne and I were driving through farm country when I saw a small graveyard in the middle of a field, with a few trees around it. We walked to it, and found a dozen or so markers of a family that had lived and died over a century ago.

      Later I wrote a poem about a person who decides to visit such a graveyard in October near midnight, in hopes of seeing a ghost. He stumbles across the field as a storm approaches.

      I've got to tell you that he sees only parts of what might be a ghost - not a very satisfying result, and then retreats to his car.

      That's all.

      Prologue

      It’s a strange old universe -

      We probe intergalactic depths

      Clinging to chocolate, tea, and

      Solid ground

      In this almost-winter darkness

      Of a Canadian October.

      It’s a strange old planet;

      I searched all my life

      For something that was more

      Than what it seemed, my theology

      Empty as last week’s Tim Horton’s cup

      Among the road weeds.

      One day I heard

      A story

      Of a graveyard

      In a field.

      ***

      No lights but the moon, and even

      Hanover’s a memory and now twenty minutes

      Away, here on a Wednesday night.

      No lights but the car dash, the whisper

      Of the heater, life in the motor.

      I kill it all with the turn of a key. The silence

      Of field and farm overwhelms.

      What the hell am I doing here? Half a

      Rumour of ghosts, half a life in running

      Halfway lost, halfway lost.

      A cornfield by the road, at or near

      The middle of the night.

      The whisper of cornhusks.

      Far out in the field, a few trees, a

      Tiny cemetery, old iron gates

      Willows and weeds.

      Willows and weeds, probably all.

      The car door is a barrier. My heart is another.

      I can deal with one, I guess.

      Journey

      The willows are swaying , their

      Legendary branches sweeping sea sounds

      Into the growing darkness.

      The storm is distant, but coming, a tide of air,

      Cold and full of terrible and

      Falling

      leaves.

      And I think, night wind is not

      day wind, it has blackness in its soul and desolation in its

      heart and winter as its

      holy grail.

      And it cares not for me, nor ever can,

      nor ever will, however I

      want it to.

      I crawl up the bank, my leather

      jacket inadequate for the ocean swell of nightwind and my boots

      wet from crossing the ditch.

      They said I was born to the wind, but that was a lie of

      cavernous proportions.

      I know that now.

      If I could speak willow,

      I would speak willow.

      If I could speak wind,

      I would speak wind.

      But I would rather speak in whispers to all the lost loves of my life

      than speak to the night. I

      don't ever want to speak

      to the

      night.

      There is a moon, but it sails among willow branches, and I've forgotten

      all the things I told it when I was too little to see over the window sill

      and too big to stay in my bed in an October

      windstorm.

      Far away, lightning. Closer, the lights of a

      farm building, only a field or

      two fields away.

      The moon is far,

      the farm, far, but the

      family in that farm farther than the moon to

      me.

      The graveyard is in the middle of that field,

      surrounded by trees.

      I am in the middle of that field, under the trees, at the edge of

      eternity and

      an old iron fence.

      Is this what love comes to?

      Old iron,

      old stone,

      the resurrection of trees and the

      blasphemy of willow roots?

      They loved and were loved,

      breathed and sat in the moonlight and felt the

      fall leaves and the

      chill on their necks and what was it all for but the nourishment of fibrous willow roots

      fondling the decaying tibia?

      The gate is ajar. Cold-footed and

      wide-eyed, I push through long grass and

      brittle weeds.

      Never plant willow beside a grave; it is far too fond of people.

      I make a nest in the grass and lean against

      stone.

      No-one complains.

      In my head, I feel the pressure falling as leaves

      scuttle to hiding

      like fish under a

      dock.

      A galaxy away, a dog barks three or four times. The moon is

      gone, perhaps behind the

      cloud, perhaps to sit on the

      beach in Cancun, smelling of tanning oil and

      eating layered orange cake with a bizarre iced

      drink beside it.

      It is as dark as the day I found out

      the truth about the truth,

      but I don't want to think about that.

      Now,

      or

      ever.

      It is one marine forecast

      no sailor wants to hear.

      It's been a life.

      I have walked alpine trails above the timberline,

      I have shopped a store known for the best fish in town.

      I've walked in a parade,

      I've danced over the septic tank. Now I have come to this

      graveyard sitting at the edge of my desires,

      older than I thought I would ever be and

      still far, far, too

      young.

      It's getting cold.

      My feet are wet. There's a movement of white

      florescence, first at the corner of my eye, then

      in front of me, moving into the ground and

      out again, then settling.

      A shirtsleeve appears, then is gone, then an

      eye and some hair.

      The willows thresh like

      mad painters, and my blood runs hot.

      Were you a life, I ask the

      thing. Did you come to this graveyard full of

      desires like presents

      that would never be unwrapped?

      Are you old now, and forever

      young?

      Did kittens make you

      happy and did you have a swing in the yard in

      summer?

      Did God show you the

      truth of the universe and did you flee in

      terror back to the fields

      where you chased butterflies?

      Or did you simply refuse to

      leave, fearing there would be no warm

      pumpkin pie in

      Heaven?
    r />   The ground rises up and a willow branch falls

      through the light, which does not

      waver more or less.

      The dog barks, far away, and a bit of rain

      falls cold on this shoreline where air touches

      trees and water reaches for the

      ground and life and death are

      too, too close together.

      I shift in my nest and my back feels

      stone, cold as

      God's heart at Easter.

      My vertebrae complain and someone spills a

      box of matches onto my

      kidneys.

      The canyon of the

      darkness of death has a ditch that is lined with

      willows.

      If you find yourself there, build a small boat.

      Ignore the wind, however it whispers to you.

      I am standing, but the light is getting smaller.

      Stone and cold rusty iron are

      dead and were always dead.

      The weeds and the leaves are part of the once-living.

      I watch the fading light flicker.

      A foot appears at the bottom,

      and fades.

      A hat

      comes and goes at the top.

      Is this what love comes to? Old iron,

      old stone, the falling of leaves and the

      tenderness of willow roots?

      They seem like the moonlight in the fall leaves and they shed a chill on the

      tourists who would only talk if they could.

      My beliefs are in the middle of a field,

      fragile as trees in the winds of

      October.

      At the edge of eternity and an old iron fence,

      the rain starts, stops.

      I am in the middle,

      I am in the middle.

      I am at edges

      and cliffs, and a star

      peeks out between violent clouds and

      I wonder what it means and if it means

      anything at all.

      Suddenly, the moon is there, and

      closer than ever.

      The farm lights appear, farther than ever.

      The dog barks, an old enemy I first fought in

      Babylon, or in some cave where the eyes of

      lions sparkled in the firelight.

      I watch the reborn moon; it sails among

      willow branches again, and I've remembered none of the

      things I told it when I was

      too little to see over the window sill and

      too big to stay in my bed in an October

      windstorm.

      I cannot speak to the dead, nor listen as they

      read the secrets of their lives, kept in notes in a

      pocket, folded and refolded in case

      anyone ever asks,

      the stories of all the lost loves

      of their lives.

      But the only one that listens is the

      night.

      Always the night and

      only

      the night.

      Do they know the truth? Or were it better I

      listen to the willows?

      I can do that.

      I've had practice.

      I crawl down the bank, my arteried cortex

      inadequate for the ocean swell of

      eternity and my boots thinking of

      crossing that ditch again.

      The moon shines cruelly, and the wind grows

      like a forest.

      And I think,

      this graveyard is not heaven; it has loss in its

      soul and

      tears in its heart and

      silence as its holy grail. And it cares not for me,

      nor ever can,

      nor ever will,

      however I want it to.

      The willows are swaying , their

      legendary branches sweeping sea sounds

      into the growing darkness.

      The storm is distant, falling away, a

      tide of air, cold and full of

      lost souls and

      falling leaves.

      Epilogue

      The car door opens onto my world.

      There is briefly, light.

      Across the field, those few trees embrace

      Stones, but the old iron gates bound only shade

      And shadow. Memories and weeds

      Willows and weeds.

      The cornhusks whisper of mornings and

      The only summer they ever knew.

      But night possesses me and

      The gravel road doesn’t go

      Where I want it to.

      What the hell am I doing here? Halfway

      Through some night, gravity-bound between earth and sky

      Pretending to life, pretending to pretend.

      The willows don’t tell me

      What I need to hear.

      I have a key. The radio comes on first.

      The motor lives, dead but alive

      Trading motion for love; I cherish

      The whisper of the heater.

      Headlights take the darkness and

      Motion consumes the road.

      Just ahead

      The highway, and

      The tumbling world

      The long path through

      Galactic night.

      Oh, God, in this small corner

      Of a small world.

      ----end ---

     
    Previous Page Next Page
© The Read Online Free 2022~2025