the fading wisps of smoke
from a dying campfire
are the sweetest
dying embers sputter
dousing sand sizzles
I miss that
we built a fire pit
in the backyard of my
old, small town home;
thirteen-tons of flagstone
and granite I moved from a
friend’s farm so a neighbor’s kid
studying landscape design
could get some hands-on
real life experience
thirty-by-twenty-foot
stone patio with
a hole in the center
if you build it…
early mornings often
found me starting a small
campfire in rock-encircled pit;
one, maybe two oak limb sections
enough to get the blood, soul,
creative juices flowing
sitting in nylon lawn chair or,
on days when I felt more rustic,
the large, ogtagonal stone
I had discovered in Pat’s rock pile,
and that Chris had anchored
in place; my fire-poking seat
eight years have passed
since I last sat there
I have moved on, physically
but like the aromatic
smoke from a dying fire
permeates a plaid flannel shirt
the scent of regret
still lingers
– Mark L. Lucker
© 2016
I could see it with you. Great visuals