A Childhood Place
I lie back in the upper mow
on age-mellowed wheat straw
autumn's aromatic and
warmly comfortable bedding
alone with the old barn
it speaks in tongues
varied but understood
each derived from dry rot
and shared yearning
with each of my hesitant
footsteps the floor
had creaked out a tale
of countless hooves
and the many wagonwheels that
crossed its younger planks
empty stalls below me
whisper of their desire
for the warmth and company
once offered by sleek guernseys
massive hand-hewn rafters
secured by wooden pegs long ago
used as a young boy's handholds
groan an old man's complaint
sag with the weight of moonbeams
falling through high small windows
I focus on three stars
spied through a hole in
the ruffled tin roof
carefully listening
as if to my father