Snapping Turtles

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Snapping Turtles

On hot afternoons in midsummer we would pedal across the county-line,

Old tar pails slung from our handle bars; and, arriving at the canal

With the sun straight up, we would walk the path from bridge to bridge,

Searching for them near the water’s edge, their shells — coarse, black,

Inanimate as stones — embedded in the warmth of the light brown mud.

I remember — how could I not? — their smell; how they hissed and strained

In the burning air; the tap and scratch of their shells and claws

As they tumbled through the murk of our listing pails; how nights, as I lay

On the edge of dream, they would return to me: silent, moonlit ghosts.

As if to remind of some solemn vow. Of our dark, convergent destinies.

— James Zinsmeister

Zinsmeister is a Beatles fanatic and teacher in the South Brunswick school district.

CE – US1

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