Produced by Maine Poetry Central and Dennis Camire
This week’s poem is by Carol-Lynn Rossel of Winthrop.
The Island of Yellow Houses
Islesboro, Maine
By Carol-Lynn Rossel
There was a day they didn’t roam:
up-islanders beyond the cove,
moneyed bunch below,
their cottages behind stern signs
and walls piled high by those
who live above, who toil on bleak
off-season weeks before the blasted snow.
Their houses, sturdy, squared and strong
proceed along the circling route
past general store and thirty-four graves.
Capes and clapboards, shingled, salt boxed,
built before affluent masses, some before the town,
with elbow room and solitude.
So many of one hue, invoking sun with creams and gold
and buttered blondes and school bus screams,
they challenge fierce gunmetal skies
when tides and ice conspire to grind
and claim one’s hard worn soul.
These yellow hopes beside the roads
diminish as the road congests and
yards and lawns define bright lives.
Except for one – a Federal home
perched high upon a rise to spy
the tides, its many rooms asleep
until summer comes.
Dennis Camire can be reached at denniscamire@hotmail.com
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