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Replying to a comment on:
Train of Thought (Prose Poem) by Sisterwolf
My Aunt Donnaâs little shotgun house huddled
by the train crossing, hunched down and worn
Honeysuckle grew like kudzu over the walls
of an old garage that leaned in the south wind
I would pluck a blossom and weave it into my
hair, playing princess in a life where no royalty
was mine to attain, except princess of poverty
Thick black soot smoked through the thick
chimney, sending blackened cinders to alight
on the honeysuckle and the dog and Donnaâs
just washed laundry, scrubbed with lye soap
When they switched and hitched cars it sounded
like heaven crying out in throes of childbirth
The conductor leaned far out the window and
waved at us as we played in the yard, and we
waved back as if he was the President or a king
The tracks ran around a curve and headed out
over the plains, hooting into the summer wind
It was a lonesome sound that made tears come
to my childâs eyes, and I never understood why
I would watch that miles-long train wind its way,
wishing I could climb aboard and chug to places
far away from the meals of beans and tatties
Chug out to a land where no voices were raised
Chug out to someplace that would be insane
with riches and wonders and goings-on a child
can only imagine a very little bit, but it would
be better than the dirty house, the beer bottles
and whiskey glasses, and not enough to eat
It would take me away to a place where working
in the mill or out at Chaneyâs Cherry Cannery
was not even a distant dream, free from labor
so endless and mindless that the brain felt
packed in wool and wrapped in a paper bag
My tears were for things I only half understood
All I know is I remember that train snaking across
the prairie in escape to better places and times
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