The Attic

The attic smelled like dust and boards

And summers shut behind old doors.

A baby bed, a picture frame,

A trunk with no one’s written name.

A hat with netting, one old shoe,

A lamp with one thing broken through,

A rocking horse with one bad eye,

A stack of magazines gone dry.

The sun came in a narrow way

And made the dust look full of play.

It danced up there in stripes of gold

On every crate and quilt and fold.

I always felt when I climbed high

The room had kept a piece of time.

Not dead, not gone, not put away,

Just waiting out another day.

And if I stood and did not talk,

And tried to hush my feet and walk,

It seemed the attic might begin

To tell me who had once been in.