Coyote and Selected Poems by
 Lamar Thomas



When We Were Young
 
 Childhood and the road,
 we were packed inside a long blue Chevy,
      driving North on the highways of 1967,
 We counted chimneys, cows, red barns.. tombstones,
 chirping and changing "See See See Rock City".
      The smell of Lucky Tiger hair tonic, peach moonshine,
 and Winston cigarettes coming in off the giant
 manipulating the steering wheel. Red headed, laughing,
 he was Daddy, yeah Daddy.. and he was big,
 6 foot 4, two hundred and thirty pounds of smiles.
 The one Mother spoke of caverns, of mountains, of gnomes
 and what we'd see... we'd See Rock City.
 There we walked across the gorge
 on a wobbly, steel and wood suspension bridge.
 Rode a cold elevator down, down past the painted
 stone gnomes and dark rainbows of rock ad coal.
 Stalagmites and stalactites, big room and a lecture.
 I drank hot tea for the first time, with milk.
      She frowned and said it was very 'British'.
 Later, battle grounds and Brownie photographs
 of Mother and Sister on a canon. All grins and waves.
 Back through the Smokies, white fog and green hills.
      Home through Chattanooga, home to Tucker,
 home through the young Atlanta Mother helped rebuild,
 to our ancient turf where the family was born
            as Finn in the time of Ogelthorpe,
      and it was all innocence and romance
 the whole world of my South was bright
 innocence and romance, gothic and legendary.
 Later, seeped with mysteries of the American tragic,
 my home, my family, my milk and honey...
 well, it was washed in the truths of alcohol and divorce,
 but when I want to sing and laugh,
 when I want to remember, to grasp and cherish,
 there is one scene I memorialize:
 See See See Rock City,
 and the beauty gives itself over to today: See....See...See...


Copyright © 2000 Lamar Thomas
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