Soon after this Thetford
chartered itself in 1761,
settlers from southern
New England arrived —
began transforming forest-
lands into community.
Villagers fast became part
of the old Haunted Vermont.
The first New England nun
visited once — trying to hand out
free copies of A Buddhist
Bible for Christ and Country.
The expressman Mister Wells
often stuttered in his rounds —
but continued to excel — and
exceed the U. S. Postal service.
Mary Lucy Child left to study —
at Wellesley — then returned home
to continue her own research.
The Academy built itself up and up.
Grace Paley’s halo of white hair
remained yet a fuzzy century away –
far off on Thetford’s poetic horizons.
Rivers overran — and fields flooded.
Children learned to climb and fall.
Sap ran and time froze inside winter.
Pond ice sometimes stayed till May.
Trees and flowers bloomed in June.
Still and all, nothing – and no one —
could hope to hide out forever —
in those cold Green Mountains.
. . . . .
Poet: Susan Powers Bourne
Source: Thetford Historical Society
Process: Excerpt and remix