Down by the Creek
When I was young,
I would often seek
to swim in the Daniels Creek,
with nothing enjoyed more
then to catch trout for dinner
or ferrying-shaped tree limbs, stout and en route
to splash the cares of heat from the workday.
Wholly inviting it was to early escape
from the chore of putting in the hay.
It was such a treat of earned relief
to fall, bare feet first,
through the hot mire,
sweeping below the summer-cold, water ripple
to the refreshing short-timed hold of renewal.
Generous family and neighborly,
fun-loving friends of place and spirit,
were inclined to spend time with kids
of all relations and mixed degrees of kin
who were full of the need
for endless adventures,
and prone to flip their lids.
Names on family pictures are fading,
like my memories,
since I more than waded in that fine creek,
and I think I would feel more complete,
and life might rarely ever feel tepid or bleak,
if I spent more time immersed in those healing waters.