Saga of a Swimming Hole

Written
2010

 It was easy to learn to swim

       in my hometown.

The Purgatory River was a tiny, cold stream

       running through town.

Just west of the Animas Street Bridge,

       a large concrete slab had been placed

       to keep the river in its bed.

The shallow stream hit this barrier

        and a hole was formed.

It was not a deep hole;

       even 10-year-old boys could stand

       on the bottom.

To learn to swim, one entered

       the water above the hole

       and let the swift current

       carry you to the hole where

        you paddled like mad

       to the shallow outlet where

       the current picked you up again.

Swimming in the old Purgatory

       had a major drawback.

Numerous communities up-stream

       used the river for sewage disposal.

This being the case

       we all learned a breaststroke

       and kept our heads

       out of the water.

There was a heated indoor swimming pool

       in the old Grand Hotel.

The hotel had been a brothel

       before the military moved to town

       during WWII.

To my mother what it had been was as

       permanent a damning

        as that delivered to the scarlet women

       who used to work there.

There are some things for which

       there was no redemption.

Better that we swam in

       cold, contaminated

       water than be warm

       in the place of sin.

So we swam in cold, dirty water,

        went to the West Theater

       and watched the Hollywood stars

       swim in their beautiful heated pools.

Success in life became a

       lapel pin of a swimming pool.

Now in my old age

       when I have a pool

        I have to clean it.

I wish it were a small

       lapel pin again.

Doug Minnis

May 6, 2010 – revised June 19,2010

Notes
This is a revision of the May 5, 2010, poem and is a poem dedicated to the Trinidad Roundup 100th anniversary. There just were no swimming pools in Trinidad other than the river and the Grand Hotel . Later a pool was built in Roundup park. It was ice cold, but we enjoyed it as kids. Even later when the new power plant was built east of town a great pool was put in.