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I’ve Never ... MAG
I’ve never been to Georgia, but 
I know. I know all about 
The terra-cotta roads that paint bare feet 
With scarlet earth; the wildflowers that carpet 
Flourishing hills and scrape the skin on 
Sunburned legs. 
And I know of the scorching sun 
That browns hard-working shoulders; 
The canopies of blossoming trees 
That shade narrow country paths. And 
The dogwood and azaleas that dance in 
Soft breezes. 
And the small clustered towns 
That make their own red bricks, 
Quarrying tons of granite 
From deep ravined pits. 
Where every face is friendly, and 
Keys are seldom used. 
And I know of the charming bits of history that 
Hide behind ancient walls; the antique 
Stories, houses, memoirs, 
That are waiting to be discovered. The precious 
fragments of olden days that accumulate 
and secrete. 
And behind a picket fence 
I can see Doris, in a sapphire dress 
Strolling across a hill of daisies,  
her hair short and golden, 
Humming a tune that Mother always sang; 
Cousin Joyce tags along behind her,  
in a yellow sun bonnet 
Picking luscious, plump peaches. 
And I see Cleo in the sunlit kitchen 
Making strawberry jam and peach marmalade; 
A pecan pie in the oven sends titillating smells 
Lingering in the delicious air. 
Outside, little Buddy jokes with Phil 
And together they laugh until sunset. 
And I know of the small cottage that rests 
Upon acres of rolling crimson land; 
The photographs framed by windowpanes 
Of a setting Georgia sun that spills 
prismatic colors across cherished soil. And 
the carefree people that reside in their precious land. 
And when I finally visit Georgia, 
Time has grayed heads and wrinkled faces; 
The young children I know now have  
grandkids of their own. 
But the land still thrives with splendor and pride, 
And shines with the same beauty that it always has 
In my grandmother’s stories of the South.  

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