
There is in the splashing of the creek a
great spray of diamonds. As each youngster sails like an
astronaut out on the tire swing, then releases the hold on
the earth to flail, suspended in time and space for that
brief second or two, there is a timelessness, a postponement
of all things evil and destructive, an affirmation of joy.
The swimming hole in Lewis Creek has been there
since Indian times, of course, and the tire swing was
probably preceded by simply a rope with knots in it. It is
one of the summer lodestones of our existence. Each summer
we have to make our pilgrimage in the hot sun to the hole
below the little waterfall, to the place were Lewis Creek
widens and deepens for the benefit of hot, dry people before
becoming just a creek again. And in this widening of the
creek, this sacred place in our summer lives, we also play
witness to the passage of years.
Across the creek from the tree with the tire
swing, the gravelly bottom extends gently with almost no
current for ten feet or so. This is the baby beach, where
squealing tots are allowed to cool off without benefit (or
hindrance) of any more covering than the smiles of their
parents. As the children grow, they venture farther out into
the current of the creek and test their strength against the
forces of nature. By the time a youngster is eight or ten,
the seduction of the tire swing becomes overwhelming and the
flailing of the arms and legs against the blue of the sky
begin. Later still, when gangliness becomes fluidity and
sleekness, and we want to make catlike moves to attract the
opposite sex, the tire is used as a swinging platform for
exquisite dives into the deep part of the creek where the
big trout lie in cold holes.
And as we age, and we watch our children come
to love the hole in Lewis Creek, and as we sip lemonade in
the shade as our grandchildren work their ways up the
swimming hole chain of life, we can look at the splashing of
the creek and see, with each sleek dive, with each laughing
bellyflop, the diamonds of the creek sent skyward, and the
laughter stays with us and keeps us strong and makes us feel
rich, and fortunate.
It is unnecessary to say the hole in Lewis
Creek is an important part of our lives, because it, along
with so many other treasures of the years, really is our
lives.
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