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My Summer on Raspberry Hill **, a rewrite of an older freeverse |
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Jul 4 17, 13:08
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Babylonian
Group: Gold Member
Posts: 102
Joined: 22-June 17
From: Arizona, USA
Member No.: 5,325
Real Name: Ali Zonak
Writer of: Poetry & Prose
Referred By:none
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My Summer on Raspberry Hill
In 1944 I was too young to go to war. Coal-fired locomotives, like smoke-belching dragons, dragged draftees away to boot camps, then to be swallowed up by battlefields.
Trainloads of young men passed Raspberry Hill. At each whistle blow we stopped picking berries from laden bushes and rushed to the overpass, leaned over the railing, waiting for the dragon’s smoke and vapor to carry us to his fearful lair among the clouds.
We heard the whooshing of wings. Not the dragon, but an army scout plane hard-landed on the railroad tracks.
Uninjured, the pilot grinned goofily and waved: “Hey, kids! Did ya see him?” “Who?” “The Jap with a blister on his ass . . . .” But there were no Japanese soldiers; that fly-boy must’ve been flying upside down far too long. Our Mexican farmhand scampered down the embankment, ran along the tracks waving his bandana to warn the approaching dragon. The monster screeched, stopped . . . just in time.
From above we stared at those gaunt faces below peering through windows: enemy prisoners, heading for POW camp.
Moments later, the dragon snorted, puffed and screamed. We rushed to the other bridge railing for one more look at those foreign soldiers.
“Crummy Nazies,” someone said, but the rest was swallowed up by the shrieking dragon as he turned around the bend and then out of sight.
We picked more berries to fill our buckets. Agnes placed one between her lips, and I stole the succulent fruit with mine. On Raspberry Hill.
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~~~~ It is a poem’s absolute perfection that can lead to its imperfection. ~~~~
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Jul 4 17, 13:51
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Group: Gold Member
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Joined: 2-November 15
From: Croydon, Surrey
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Real Name: Antony Glaser
Writer of: Poetry
Referred By:Eira Rhaposdy
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This poem is delightful. The child exposed to the POWs in transit on the imagined dragon blowing fumes of smoke. A great juxaposion between reality and fantasy until the refrain Crummy Nazis. Picking the berries seemed to recall a bucolic ideal but taking the berries from Agnes lips suggests burgeoning sensuality which is very touching
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Imagination fires the soul, resolution the longing.
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Jul 4 17, 15:11
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Babylonian
Group: Gold Member
Posts: 102
Joined: 22-June 17
From: Arizona, USA
Member No.: 5,325
Real Name: Ali Zonak
Writer of: Poetry & Prose
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QUOTE (greenwich @ Jul 4 17, 13:51 ) This poem is delightful. The child exposed to the POWs in transit on the imagined dragon blowing fumes of smoke. A great juxaposion between reality and fantasy until the refrain Crummy Nazis. Picking the berries seemed to recall a bucolic ideal but taking the berries from Agnes lips suggests burgeoning sensuality which is very touching Thank you, Greenwich; those were the days before diesel locomotives; now, so many years later I still haven forgotten that incident. The love bug bit me around the age of nine or ten, but since it was not a deer tick, I survived the bug bite, lol. Golden memories, oh, yes. Thank you, my friend. Ali
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~~~~ It is a poem’s absolute perfection that can lead to its imperfection. ~~~~
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Jul 4 17, 16:10
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Joined: 2-August 03
From: Southwest New Jersey, USA
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Real Name: Daniel J Ricketts, Sr.
Writer of: Poetry
Referred By:Lori
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You're a great story-teller here, Ali. I love the drama and surprises knit neatly into it. I came along a bit too late to see any enemy soldiers in trains in Tacoma, WA... but there may have been some there, since Ft. Lewis is there within my home Pierce County, where Tacoma is the County Seat and Mt Rainier sits on the Throne. I've spoken with many soldiers who disembarked from Ft. Lewis to overseas in WWII and Viet Nam who had been at Ft Lewis for some time and hadn't seen the mountain, when one day the clouds lifted from around it, and shocked them. It took up the whole sky. That happens there a lot. On a clear day, Mt. Rainier can simply catch you aghast! National Park Service PhotoI do recall the puffing locomotives myself, having walked the tracks just about a half mile up the hill from my boyhood home, picking up a spilled coal here and there for our wood stove. The trains regularly hauled 100 lumber cars filled to the top with giant Douglas fir logs heading for the mills. The tracks ran right alongside our Boys Club, where I worked from age 12-17 before college. I also recall the trick of putting a penny or nickel on the tracks, allowing the train to totally flatten and expand them! We loved that as kids... when we could afford it! Well, I have digressed a bit. Perhaps showing my age, huh? The "Crummy Nazis" is a clever kids'-eye-view twist. deLighting in your sharing, Daniel
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Jul 4 17, 16:42
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Mosaic Master
Group: Praetorian
Posts: 4,599
Joined: 4-August 03
From: Birmingham, England
Member No.: 12
Real Name: Eira Needham
Writer of: Poetry
Referred By:Lori
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This is wonderful, Ali! You are certainly a great story teller.
I love the dragon like descriptions:
Coal-fired locomotives, like smoke-belching dragons,
waiting for the dragon’s smoke and vapor to carry us to his fearful lair among the clouds.
Moments later, the dragon snorted, puffed and screamed.
I remember steam trains so well. My grandparents had quite a long garden and the railway line used to run just past the end. I used to love to see a train come by - smoke belching and always waved at the driver who waved back. Happy memories!
I can't see anything I would change here, I just enjoyed every line.
Look forward to your next. Eira
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Jul 4 17, 17:00
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Babylonian
Group: Gold Member
Posts: 102
Joined: 22-June 17
From: Arizona, USA
Member No.: 5,325
Real Name: Ali Zonak
Writer of: Poetry & Prose
Referred By:none
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QUOTE (JustDaniel @ Jul 4 17, 16:10 ) You're a great story-teller here, Ali. I love the drama and surprises knit neatly into it. I came along a bit too late to see any enemy soldiers in trains in Tacoma, WA... but there may have been some there, since Ft. Lewis is there within my home Pierce County, where Tacoma is the County Seat and Mt Rainier sits on the Throne. I've spoken with many soldiers who disembarked from Ft. Lewis to overseas in WWII and Viet Nam who had been at Ft Lewis for some time and hadn't seen the mountain, when one day the clouds lifted from around it, and shocked them. It took up the whole sky. That happens there a lot. On a clear day, Mt. Rainier can simply catch you aghast! National Park Service PhotoI do recall the puffing locomotives myself, having walked the tracks just about a half mile up the hill from my boyhood home, picking up a spilled coal here and there for our wood stove. The trains regularly hauled 100 lumber cars filled to the top with giant Douglas fir logs heading for the mills. The tracks ran right alongside our Boys Club, where I worked from age 12-17 before college. I also recall the trick of putting a penny or nickel on the tracks, allowing the train to totally flatten and expand them! We loved that as kids... when we could afford it! Well, I have digressed a bit. Perhaps showing my age, huh? The "Crummy Nazis" is a clever kids'-eye-view twist. deLighting in your sharing, Daniel Oh, Daniel, what a great photo of Rainier! It's a great area, and I had to chuckle at the thought of us kids flattening nickels and pennies on the tracks. At first I had reservations about my "attempts" to derail the locomotive--silly boy, lol. Yes, we had those POW camps everywhere, and some prisoners actually worked the fields without more than one guard keeping a sleepy eye on them. My folks always appreciated them for their work ethics. Actually, I don't mind showing my age; I think you and I have forgotten more than some smartaleck could ever hope to acquire, lol. What can I really say about your comment? Perhaps that it was a genuine pleasure to hear your own recollections of decades gone by. Thank you very much, my friend. Equally delighted, Ali
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~~~~ It is a poem’s absolute perfection that can lead to its imperfection. ~~~~
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Jul 4 17, 17:17
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Babylonian
Group: Gold Member
Posts: 102
Joined: 22-June 17
From: Arizona, USA
Member No.: 5,325
Real Name: Ali Zonak
Writer of: Poetry & Prose
Referred By:none
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QUOTE (Eisa @ Jul 4 17, 16:42 ) This is wonderful, Ali! You are certainly a great story teller.
I love the dragon like descriptions:
Coal-fired locomotives, like smoke-belching dragons,
waiting for the dragon’s smoke and vapor to carry us to his fearful lair among the clouds.
Moments later, the dragon snorted, puffed and screamed.
I remember steam trains so well. My grandparents had quite a long garden and the railway line used to run just past the end. I used to love to see a train come by - smoke belching and always waved at the driver who waved back. Happy memories!
I can't see anything I would change here, I just enjoyed every line.
Look forward to your next. Eira Hello, Eira; it's always a pleasure to share a story with fellow-writers who can relate to long-past events and trying times. A friend of mine has a home in Goshen, Indiana, with the tracks running right alongside his back yard, just as was the case with your grandparents. It's hard to imagine trains passing though every hour, day and night. He is so used to it, he'll never leave his home--while alive. I'm glad you liked my story. Thank you, Eira. Ali
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~~~~ It is a poem’s absolute perfection that can lead to its imperfection. ~~~~
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