CHERRY-PICKING AT THE OLD TOWN DUMP
Can we ever forget the smelly old dump,
a veritable cornucopia of stuff
where the price was always right?
The Cambridge Dump looked like
a war-ravaged zone: smoldering fires,
air filled with acrid stink of toxic fumes,
an uninviting scene until one invariably
exclaimed: “How could anyone have
thrown that out?”
Flocks of seagulls swarmed overhead
swooping down to feed on rotting cobblers,
turnips and fish entrails; a bulldozer snarls
and rumbles shoving mounds of rubbish
into huge pits creating a crazy-quilt jumble,
a treasure trove for an archeological dig.
Scavenging through many summers
I have filled a barn with artifacts
which tell the story of life in the distant past:
an oak washstand found with one door
flapping in the wind, hand carved eel-spear
sticking out of the remains of a crumpled
out-house, farm tools with well worn wooden
handles that have developed a leathery patina,
three legged milking stool covered in dried
cow dung, crushed hand made tin candle mold,
rusty Model-A honk-honk-a googah horn,
pump organ with busted bellows and burled
walnut Victorian spindles and filigree,
hand blown bottles of all shapes and colors
with bubbles luminescent on a window sill
in the morning sun, adze with broken handle,
cracked butter churn, flail and a large variety
of old wagon wheels, some with wooden spokes.
Fires no longer burn at recycling centers,
dumpsters neatly haul stuff antiseptically away.
New rules and regulations even specify for Q-tips
to have a recycled designation.
My prospecting days may be over but the planned
obsolescence of appliances, cell phones and I-Pods
of today may not leave much for prospectors of tomorrow.
Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. Leonia, N.J. 07605