Saturday, 15 September 2012

Autumn Poem



Brown-curled parchment driftings of the green lane's ancient haws                    
crunch beneath my boots;  once again the year is dying,                        
and this shaded path is in transition.  Those screaming swifts are now long gone 
that once possessed this sky.                                                                
Quarrelsome starlings arrive to take their place, and only                                  
the last few nervous swallows hold conversation along the wires, debating         
their overdue departure.  Beneath the coursing swifts of June                
there had seemed so much time, too much to ever spend; but now                    
the north wind on my face breathes its tale of coming frosts,
and my account is overdrawn.                                                              
The farmyard beasts eye me across their muddy gate.  For them                       
time has a different measure                                                                 
and is not reflected upon.  I walk on                                                     
towards the yellow smear of the disappearing sun,                                            
leaving the swallows on their perching wires, to climb the hill path                      
and gaze across the hard land they will leave.

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