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That Good Old Tree
They tore down that good old tree
That sat at the bottom
Of the town's favorite hill,
Blessing the crescent
Between graceful mound and open field.
The far-reaching roots survived the building
Of the town around
Just to stand there,
Peacefully.
We used to run to and back
In soccer practice, dodging bulging roots,
And sled down the hill's embracing slopes
Every year.
The tree was marvelous,
Healthy and shade-giving,
Fat-trunked and tall,
Full of nests and the personality
Of an elderly woman,
So full of age, so full of wisdom.
And in the fall, the leaves were shed
In a unique shade of an orange ablaze,
One that dazzled and amazed
Our youthful eyes
Like simmering sparks slowly soaring.
In the spring and summer,
Passing cars noticed its great grandeur,
And cyclists stopped at the sight
Of the thousands of little ‘Twirleycopters’,
As we used to call them,
Thown into the breezy air.
And below the outstreched branches, occasionally sat
A person reading, thinking, or dreaming.
And in sledding season
The wooden cacoon froze,
Waiting excitedly to one day bloom again,
With tiny icicles drooping towards the earth
That reflected the bundled up gazers
Who enjoyed the wintery wonder.
Even under a foot of pillowy snow,
The natural slopes of the hill
Steered the gleeful sleds
Clear from the trunk;
Nobody ever was hurt.
And even after a hundred years
Of growing in the same spot,
Its color was numb to some,
A ‘safety hazard’ it was called
Diminishing the abundant beauty
To just an unsafe, useless resource in the way.
And so they tore down that good old tree
Which still sits well in my memory.
And now the tree is gone
-The hill is bare-
And the tree is gone.
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