They Come, Growling
Foster Dickson
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Everything was tomorrow.
But not now.
Some was yesterday, and most went
by unnoticed. That one kid
humanized what was left over, and
the green sprouts went on, shooting
up. The hard brown dirt allowed little
cracks, and what was before unseen,
unknown, came to take the place of what
went away. That one kid went away, and gave
his name to that part of the story.
We’ve agonized over
these memories, but it has been
OK in the end—or as close to the end
as we are now.
Within the glory days of springtime
into summer, we’ve morphed, ossified,
and even begged for mercy when it was
appropriate. Marble columns fall
and shatter, where saplings may sway
and return upright. Some had fatal
flaws: a split in the trunk, a lightning
strike, a creeping disease.
Yes, luring the future with a trail of sweets
that we should have eaten ourselves
gave us the impression that the sacrifice
was worth it.
We swindled sidewinders for small guarantees,
just for today, because we opted to worry
about their fangs for all time.
They come, growling,
out of some need for our wilting.
That one kid stayed behind, and I
kept going, and now we aren’t
recognized anymore,
except by those who can’t forget.
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Foster Dickson carving a pumpkin with his daughter when she was two years old.
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Foster Dickson is a writer, editor, and award-winning teacher in Montgomery, Alabama. His most recent book Faith. Virtue. Wisdom was commissioned for the 150th anniversary of Montgomery Catholic Preparatory School.
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Posted in "Boo"din: Creature Feature, Oct '24 and tagged in #boudin