James J. Siegel
Chippewa Lake
Everything will end
like the Big Dipper coaster
at Chippewa Lake.
It is not easy
to imagine the midway
sleeping through summer
or the Tom Sawyer
steam engine beached on the shore
dead as an old carp.
But these things happen.
Factories close, families move,
gears sigh one last time.
The Starlight Ballroom
is now a pile of steel bones
from last year's arson.
And the Tumble Bug
tucked away in Kiddie Land
has toppled over
from the weight of time,
from teenagers sneaking in
to climb on her arms.
I know how this looks
these mechanical corpses
left for cruel deaths.
But the land will bring
a kind and gentle passing
that comes with the spring.
The season creeps in
with tight vines for the turnstiles,
the chain link fences.
It fills the empty
spaces of the Ferris wheel
with thick birch branches,
coaxes the dogwoods
to crane their necks through the slats
of the coaster's track.
All will surrender
like the delicate remains
of a white-tailed deer
left to decompose
with the wild violets that bloom
from the soft ribcage.
See how the lift hill
of the Big Dipper rises
like a slender spine
reaching for the limbs
of blue ash, for the embrace
of the day's last light.