Henry Hillier Parker |
Load
Today
we carried home the last brown sheaf
and
hookt the scythe against the dry barn wall:
the
yellow border's on the chestnut leaf,
the
beech leaf's yellow all.
Tomorrow
we must bring the apples in,
they
are as big as they shall ever be:
already
starlings ready to begin
have
tasted many a tree.
And
in the garden, all the roses done,
the
light lies gently, faint and almost cold,
on
wither'd goldenrod and snapdragon
and
tarnisht marigold.
John
Hewitt
It is too easy to
forget what the seasons really mean. Food! For the mouth and heart and eyes.
And the different work that this entails. There was a time when the earth was
closer to my everyday experience. But I have lost contact in many ways. Is it
strange to find it in words, in poetry? Now, when I am walking the paved
streets, I remember how it used to be. My mother in the garden, pulling up
bright orange carrots, purple beets, washing them clean. Shelling peas,
blanching endive, slicing green beans – each vegetable in its time, and time a
succession of vegetable events. I miss earth time. Clock time is my conductor
now, and it’s not the same.
Thank goodness
for poetry and memory.
“Today we carried
home the last brown sheaf.”
“Tomorrow we must
bring the apples in.”
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