
It’s May. The streets are wet from this morning’s sharp shower, apple blossoms are falling from the trees, and the birds are singing and whittling twigs into nests. The air seems a song. My dad, bless him these 10-years gone, used to whistle that zip-a-dee-doo-dah song. He’d smile as if Mr Bluebird was on his shoulder. But Dad was Northern to the bone – had an odd fear of going south of the Mason-Dixon Line. As if the enemy of his own good intentions waited on the other side of that divide. But I’ve done — crossed over it last month, and as we drove to Point Lookout and wandered the Chesapeake views, I swear that I heard my dad whistle that zip-a-dee-doo-dah song as the wind coaxed the old lighthouse to sing its own mournful tune.
This sea’s without soul,
Light swimming underwater,
These waves, too fractious
Written for dVerse’s Haibun #36 and The Twiglets #22. This is based on a recent trip to Virginia, Pennsylvania and southern Maryland. Image from US Coastguard Image Archive. The song “Zip-a-dee-doo-dah” is from Disney’s movie “Song of the South” 1946
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