Obsolete
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Common Schmuck
Autumn is a Melancholy Time
Trip to Japan Part III
THE TRAIN AS A METAPHOR
A FICTIONAL NON-FICTION TRIP TO JAPAN PART TWO
A FICTIONAL NON-FICTION TRIP TO JAPAN PART ONE
Snow Day
Joyful Solitude
Summer Storm
PETE AND THE BIG PHILCO
My Uncle Frank
Too Many Good-byes
The Power Of Art
Cowboys
Nightsounds
The Factory
A Gift Of Louie
I Knew You But A Moment
A Home Destruction, I Mean A Home Improvement Essay
A Bridge From A Snowy Place
***
An Eternity Together, Part I
The Adventure Begins, Part II
Paris, Part III
Love Is Eternal, Part IV
Epipthany, Part V
***
A Christmas Prayer
A Strange Occurance
A Renewable Joy
A Retired Man's Period Of Adjustment
Baseball, I Love It
Almost There
Be A Man They Say
Elderly Man: An Adventure
The neighborhood eight and A. Jones
Augustus and Winston Conversations: The Introductions
Augustus and Winston Conversations: The Mind
Augustus and Winston Conversations: War
Hazel
Grandmothers
Fathers, Sons and Grandsons
Endless Conversation
I Thought About Death Today
Hometown
Retirement Plans
Rain
Professor Knowitall's Magnificent? Invention
Pretense, Stress, and a Question of Freedoms
Long Distance
Please Smile Again
I've Fallen In Love Again
I've Been Mile-stoned
In Life
The Hummer and the Horse
The Butterfly
Serene Eternity
A Bad Case Of Writer's Block
When I Daydream
Word Phun
Whiffers
Would of, Could of, Might of Dreams
Two Candles
The Street
The Spider's Web
The Ring
The Long Steel Track
The Internet
The Village
The Birdman Of Carter's Lake
The Silent Transaction
A Very Special Creation
Midnight Train
Obsolete

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OBSOLETE

 

 

The rays of the sun slant through unwashed windows, illuminating the

dryness of age in this forgotten place that stands by the side of steel tracks

where weeds now grow; where once great iron locomotives came, paused, then disappeared; where now only the sound of dried leaves skittering along the ground interrupt its sleep.  

 

Benches along the wood paneled walls remain highly polished from

the multitudes of trousers and dresses that once buffed their

surfaces.

 

Bars of the ticket agent’s window, a patina of age upon them,

still guard a long gone presence that once routinely and officiously

charted the journeys, the count of which befogs the counter.

 

This forgotten structure, with walls that were once yellow,

green or red, chipped away by weather and neglect has turned

gray now as if to accommodate the modern world by becoming

as one with landscapes of the past.

 

Yet, to forget so easily this creation of its time as a discarded

relic, would bury all that we were that lives still in the lazy sun lit

dust of memory and where we too will assuredly abide one day.