Tag: VERMONT

  • FIDDLEHEADS

    Each May I walked the ground along Bull Run
    seeking fiddleheads.
    Returning home with my bag of ferns,
    I’d blow the papery layer off,
    then steam them. Their perfume filled the house
    with a scent I dream of still.
    I’d arrange the stems and
    whorled tops on a painted plate
    and drizzle them with hollandaise.
    Sitting on the porch with fiddleheads and wine,
    I’d watch the sun set and
    celebrate surviving another Vermont winter.
    The feast made it impossible to believe
    the world less than
    perfect.

    Each May I return to that riverside
    to walk and pick and steam again
    those green ferns in my mind
    savor days feasting on found food
    before wine and wanting tangled life.

    It was a small New England town
    I taught English to farm kids.
    Summers I sold crafts to tourists from a one-room school
    with Gretchen Crookshank, 80, all gossip, elegance
    and jangling bracelets and the nervous
    mother-son pair from Center Street, whose handmade
    hats looked machine-made.
    I studied knitting with a Norwegian neighbor and
    spinning at the Hoffman’s farm.
    Barbara, the bus driver, struggled to get her rabbits
    to mate – tales of candlelight and music in the barn
    defied myths of rabbit reproduction.
    I made spending money as a night librarian.
    I had kind friends.
    My husband loved me.

    Each May I return to that riverside
    to select ferns
    and steam them once again
    to think on the turns
    that took me far from fiddleheads
    and the small town that held them.

    A town I left to wander
    from school to ski resort to Fortune 500 corporation –
    another marriage and a family
    South to Jersey then further still to
    Carolina mountains where high along the Blue Ridge
    we built a home with our own hands
    board by slow board – designing as we went our nest
    which, when it fell, almost toppled me as well.
    But I had a son to raise and
    clothes that needed washing
    dinners to cook, a dog to walk
    I learned that women hold the world together.
    I moved back to the rumble of Interstates and 18 wheelers
    where a red-tailed hawk glimpsed early
    could hold me the entire day.

    Each May I look northward
    dream of fiddleheads
    along Bull Run
    remember pale iris in the yard,
    where nightly trains
    run whistling by.