In the Ancient Hills

Photo by John Fowler / Unsplash

It was raining in Tulsa
Which meant that in two or three hours
It would be raining here.

While the wind drove the storm east
I sat reading and
Waiting

For the rain to pound its way
Across the flat red earth of Oklahoma
And into the hills of Arkansas.

The black dirt of these hills
Long gone down river to the delta
Where broad fields of rice and cotton

Lay out across the landscape
Frequented by migrating mallards
And red-winged black birds.

Now we spend our blip of a moment
On earth trying to grow tomatoes
On the rocky hillsides,

Seduced by the tangy juice
That drips off our chins

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About the Author
Lynn Packham Larson

Lynn lives with her husband in a house that he built, where the edge of town meets the edge of the woods. She was raised in a big city, and now finds peace and inspiration walking the dog and hiking the trails near her home. The birding is wonderful, trees abundant, water plentiful. Lynn practices Yoga, shares what she learns with others and can't imagine aging without it. Her poem "I Have a Photo" was a 2024 Woody Barlow Poetry Contest prize winner.

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