By Dr. Elizabeth S. Taylor
December 7, 2015
Hand-built, smoothed gray with age, the stubby ladder rests against the old apple tree, its gnarled bark accepting the still, hopeful embrace of the rails and rungs once climbed by a child when this tree by its stone wall watched over a field of corn, or was it cows, instead of this fervent jungle – green vines wrapping bushes and spindly trees, sprung from seeds blown down by wind-flung torrents of rain, and allowed to grow, unchecked by the farmer, father of that child, both now long gone, their spirits left behind, lurking in nature’s veils that canopy the path, dappling sun into shade as we walk on a summer’s day, wondering: what child, living how, climbed to pick, or to see, so long ago; and accepting, as we wander, our own graying but patient embrace.
Dr. Elizabeth S. Taylor co-directs the Nonfiction Writing Program in the Department of English at Brown University, where she teaches various forms of creative nonfiction, including flash nonfiction. She is the author of The Plain Language of Love and Loss: A Quaker Memoir. Her articles include reflections on the teaching of nonfiction and on the journeys of conscience by young men during the Vietnam War.
Photo “Treehouse Ladder” provided by Stephanie Sicore, via Flickr.com creative commons license.
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