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 Texas : Features : Columns : Spunky Flat and Beyond :
GOODBYE SUMMER
by George Lester
George Lester
I envied those kids who liked school. If I could have been more like them, my life would have been a lot happier. School wasn’t too bad, once it started and I got into the habit of being confined again. The last few days of summer vacation were really what dealt me the most misery. Little Eddie Lester was a complete free spirit who hated the thought of losing those glorious, carefree days for another nine months. The time between the last day of school in the spring and the first day of school in the fall seemed to get shorter each year. Getting up each summer morning and thinking about all the fun I was going to have that day made life a dream come true.

We did have our chores to do around the farm, but I preferred even those to going to school. I sometimes felt that I was born a hundred years too late. It seemed to me that those pioneer kids who spent the days hunting and fishing to put food on the table had the ideal life. So what if they did grow up without being able to read and write. I figured there were more important things in life than “book learning.”

One summer stands out in my mind above all the rest. It was Sunday, and the next day began that awful end of freedom and joy. I decided to make one last visit to all the magic places I held so dear all that summer. Trotting along beside me, my dog, Smoky, even seemed to know there was something different about that day. We first walked through the cane field, a place I enjoyed because of the way it made me feel, as if I were cut off from the world. There were bare spots in the middle where the cane didn’t grow. In one of these islands, I could dream that I was in some far off land, hiding from the advancing civilization.

Then there was that treasured place down at the creek bed. Even in the worst drought, there was one pool that never seemed to dry up. The cool, shady grass at the water’s edge was a pleasant respite from the scorching summer heat. I would lie there and look up at the white clouds drifting by like giant ships going out to sea.

Next, we moved on to our neighbor’s land where there was a thick grove of oaks and mesquite. I had taken a shortcut through there many times when going to visit my playmates on the next farm. The path was like a tunnel, covered by the thick branches above. Now and then, I’d see a rabbit scurrying into the brush. That day, everything looked different; a shadow had been cast upon those beautiful sights.

I stopped for a while and rested on a log. Somewhere in the distance I could hear the lonesome coo of a dove. Smoky nuzzled up close to me as if he knew what I was thinking. It was getting late, and the sun was about to dip below the horizon, but I stayed a little while longer to drink in the last breath of this wonderful season, a season that was dying before my very eyes.
© George Lester
Spunky Flat and Beyond - A Memoir
- August 1, 2005 column
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