Over rolling hills pocked with buffalo wallows, I walked with Grandma Nellie on the rutted pasture road. "Imagine the Indians," Grandma said, Then painted vanished Comanches with words, Telling me that an Indian boy would have heard The same whisper of wind in the prairie grass, The same dry rattle of cottonwood leaves, And the boy would have sniffed, just like me, To smell the creek in its sun-dappled bed As it ran beneath the trees. In my mind, another age blossomed, Before barbed wire or earth-turning plows. "We live in the heartland, center of the U.S.A.", Grandma Nellie told me, as she spread a map To show me where we'd walked that day. On that map, Kansas was yellow As ripened waves of wind-tossed wheat, Sunflowers by the roadside, Or the warmth of summer sunshine In my memory of the heartland Where Grandma walked with me. _Jerry D. Ferrin, 23 Feb 1989.
Copyright© Jerry Ferrin 1989
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