clock




SCHOOLDAYS, SCHOOLDAYS

We are like students in a cosmic class room,
looking to be led, wanting to learn our lesson,
each eager, yet afraid to be called to make our
mark on the chalkboard of life.

I remember how it was, how I learned that the
thin edge of the chalk, under pressure would
skip and scratch over the board, making screechy,
shrieking, "I could just kill him!" noises while
leaving only the lightest of marks.

Last period - boys who performed well were
permitted to go outside to dust the erasers.
Good girls brought water and sponged the
slate clean for another day. I was kept in.

Why am I still here in near emptiness?
Tommy Lee and Bobby are long gone, killed
in an almost forgotten war. David died in his
garden on a recent summer day. They found
him there, his basket filled with fresh tomatoes.

I am sorry I cannot complete my lesson. I sit.
I stare at the blank board. Where are the others?
Did they get the right answer? No, that is not
chalk dust in my hair. Teacher, may I have more
time? Could you repeat the assignment?





Copyright © 1994 by Forrest Ellis
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce
this book or portions thereof, in any form.





forrestFORREST ELLIS

Forrest,a one time soldier, aircraft worker, lawyer and aspiring poet lives with his graphics artist wife, Phyllis, on a farm north of Dahlonega, Georgia. He was a member of the Atlanta Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Atlanta for twenty years and is currently a member of the Georgia Mountains Unitarian Universalist Church. He is also a member of the Georgia State Poetry Society and the Northeast Georgia Writer's Club. He is now retired and completing his first novel.






Page One Page Two Page ThreePage Four
Page Five Page SixPage SevenPage Eight

Home