Flash Freeze

Written
1994

 My forbearers caught in a time lock,

      the photographic tidal pool.

Seventy five year old black and whites

      next to last week's color prints

      give a dress prade of the family troops

      in the uniforms of the day.

Marcelled hair, flapper dresses and

      funny starched collars are draped

      over cars now only seen

      at Harrah's car museum.

My father caught in a baby dress and

      me in short pants with cotton hose.

Mother in a 20's mini skirt or knickers

       is always with a long forgotten gang.

That brace of mules were like family

      to those actors

      from early in the albums.

Search the face of Grandpa to find

      the family ears stuck so prominently

      on my head and my grandson's.

Generation after generation of big,

      useful ears can be traced through

      the inherited family albums.

From grandpa's birth date to my youngest

      grandchild's probable life spans

      more than two centuries.

Yet, we are so alike that we seem

      timeless.

This is a place where time stands still

      and I am here often.

The family's homeland,

      a photographer's studio

      with props that are used over and over.

      Stonewall hasn't changed

      and is backdrop to

      an ever changing cast of family players.

Picnics with ice cream and watermelon

      are recorded with the monument at the

      lake a timeless reference.

The wild flower meadow on top of the pass

      testifies to a continuing praise of nature.

The houses where we have lived show

      trees from seedlings to fruit bearers.

This is my place in the world

      and here resides my family

            and now me.

The only other place I can visit them

      is in the cemetery.

And if, by cruel chance, there is no heaven,

then at least we will all be together

      between these covers of these albums.

Notes
Published in "Trinidad, Colorado My Home Town" part of the 50th reunion of the class of '46.