Songs of Youth
My thin memories were born
Among the whispering grasses
Of an Indiana field sloping down
To drink from a nameless creek.
They were suckled by jiggers
And sung to by whippoorwills and crickets
Under a weeping willow by the creek
And endless summers of warm sunlight.
Hopes and expectations shot across the night sky
And sometimes danced real slow
Pressed against young girls with hair like wheat
And tissue stuffed in their brassieres.
But that was good enough for me
'Cause that's what breasts felt like
Or so I thought
In the innocence of my original sin.
They dug up that Indiana field a few years back
And built a freeway through the middle
Of my memories and sometimes I wonder
What's stuffed in their brassieres now.