Thursday, November 23, 2023

Wintah Maine 1959


Walking on a back road

From school
No sign of the sun
Leaden clouds overhead
Fields frozen by deep snow.
A northerly wind from Montreal
A long slog home.


Grey slush underfoot
The wet seeping
Through boots
Cold wet feets.

Another mile to Grandmother’s house.

Where waits
A warm pot belly stove
Dreaming
Pull off boots
Peel off soxes
Stick frozen toes
Under the heat

Aaah

A cup of tea With milk and sugar

Aaah


No more the cold
Grandmother’s house Maine winter
Only another half-mile
To go
Till
Grandmother’s house

Spring
Another four months away.
Till then
Counting the days.
To April
Flowers
And no snow.

Aaaah

I spent my early childhood in Maine, sledding the winters on Blackstrap Hill. There were really winters then, still are in Fort Kent. Painting by Winslow Homer A New EnglanderFrom school No sign of the sun Leaden clouds overhead Fields frozen by deep snow. A northerly wind from Montreal A long slog home.

Grey slush underfoot Cold wet seeping Through soles Another mile to Grandmother's house.

Where waits The warmth of a pot belly stove Pull off boots Peel off soxes Stick frozen toes Under the heat

Aaah

A cup of tea With milk and sugar

Aaah

No more the cold Grandmother's house Maine winter Only another half-mile To go Till Grandmother's house And Winter Another four months away Till Not winter. Till then Counting the days. To April Flowers And no snow.

I spent my early childhood in Maine, sledding the winters on Blackstrap Hill. There were really winters then, still are in Fort Kent.

Painting by Winslow Homer

A New Englander.

There are two season in Maine. The season of good sledding and the season of bad sledding. - Doctor Frank A Smith, who rode a sled on his visits around Gorham, Maine, when wintah was truly wintah.

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