Seventy
years ago I made a pair of stilts
from six-foot two-by-twos, with blocks
to stand on nailed a foot from the bottom.
If I was to
learn to walk on stilts I wanted
them red and I had to wait almost forever
for the paint to dry, laid over the arms
of a saggy,
ancient Adirondack chair
no longer good for much but holding hoes
and rakes and stakes rolled up in twine,
and at last
I couldn’t wait a minute longer
and took the stilts into my hands and stepped
between them, stepped up and stepped out,
tilted far
forward, clopping fast and away
down the walk, a foot above my neighborhood,
the summer in my hair, my new red stilts
stuck to my
fingers, not knowing how far
I’d be able to get, and now, in what seems
just a few yards down the block, I’m there.
Ted Kooser,
poetryonthecharles.net August 24, 2020
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