Winter Memory
Posted on April 7, 2015 by Mary Grasso
When we went sledding, long time gone,
The icicles were six feet long;
The snow surpassed a six-foot wall
And piled in drifts of six yards tall.
Or maybe not. But so it seemed
To us as children. Oft we dreamed
Of snow-flaked heavens where we’d glide
(With God and Angels at our side)
Upon a glittering field of white.
And all the day, and into night
The wind would howl, the cold trees shake,
The birds would hide, the ground would quake,
And magically our sleds would fly
Toward the clear and frozen sky!
And when the runners, caked with frost,
Were slowing down, we’d nothing lost:
The pond was slick. On sturdy skates
We’d cut the ice with figure eights.
It never happened quite that way
But we were young and prone to say
That winter was the best of seasons
And—sled and skate—we had our reasons.
Now slippery paths and icy ways,
A snowstorm that might last for days,
Can make us weary and surmise
To think of winter otherwise.
Young things still flaunt the season’s woes
But veterans of remembered snows
Retire to our Lazy-Boys
And smile upon those ancient joys.