Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

10-Navasota

Navasota

In Texas on the Brazos River, you

Found refuge in a store selling antiques,

A family home now consecrated to

The well-wrought past, when things were made of wood,

Beauty blushed on smooth ceramic cheeks,

And workmanship was uniformly good.

The low damp skies of winter were forsaken

Of any sign the weather might improve,

But when we took the road less often taken

And stopped in Navasota for an hour,

You found an unsuspected sacred trove

Of treasure there, including at least four

Elaborate birdcages and roll-top desks,

A dozen dolls with glass-bead eyes that closed,

A smoking jacket’s patchwork arabesques,

And decorated oriental fans,

Along with other items that engrossed

Your eyes and filled you with acquisitory plans.

Your soul was nourished by such things as these:

A wicker chair, Depression glass, a vase

Shaped like a bird, a copse of painted trees.

Texas was unlovely and unsound,

But there in Navasota was a place

Where remnants of a lost world could be found.

Robert Daseler

Home Planet News