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Jamestown Summer By Hugo DeSarro From the upper level we see one-half of Narragansett Bay; North Kingston, lying on the distant misty shore, the water moving slowly past in a smooth gray sheet as if reluctant to some final abyss. Beneath a sunless sky, silent sailboats in the distance flit here and there like wet-winged moths. The trees stand tall and straight along the water’s edge with shrouds of heavy vines, and in and out of clumps of sumac, that twitch and writhe with passing gusts, the grackles fly. Cars, self concerned, drill past on the road below like hard-shelled beetles; and blackbirds cling to power lines and stay until your eyes meet theirs, then fall gracefully away. And just beyond the nearby hedge a crow struts to and fro across the short and tufted grass, bombarded by a shrieking sparrow each time it chances to approach the hidden nest, turning this way and that until confused and flying off, the tiny defender pursuing and attacking in flight. The sky darkens, the wind blows, the water moils and trees rattle their mantles of vines; and far away, far past the distant bridge and purple hills, the rant and amalgamated roar of the world at work; and the labored flight of a single gull in journey above the narrow road; and we are reminded of the little that is of permanence in our world. |
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Document last modified on: 09/25/2005