Steven Outram |
End of Summer
Stanley Kunitz
That moment when, doing something usual and ordinary, you feel it - something is happening. Something is changing.
Is it a leaving, or an arriving?
The phrase " turn on its hinge", and later, " the iron door" - you can almost hear the creak of it, feel it's coldness, it's finality - like a prison door.
Is Summer a room in Time's house? Or is it outside, and now we move inside, into the dark confines of an inhospitable cell?
"I stood in the disenchanted field". All the lovely sea-like grasses, gone. All the movement and sway shorn down to bristles. And then the realization "that part of my life was over".
Is this the season of disenchantment? And what happens when only the bones are left?
Is it possible that there is a deeper magic? A magic beyond seasons, a meaning running through all times and places, an unswervable undefeatable unchangeable and glorious victorious beauty that transforms us?
That would melt an iron door.
This is one of those incidences where I enjoy your writing even more than the poem.
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