Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Home. Autumn. The Signatures. by Joseph Stroud
Let the day begin with its light.
For once, let the mothers and fathers sleep late.
Let the chickens in the mud
scratch their own inscrutable chicken poetry.
Let the clothes hang from the line
in the rain.
Allow the crickets under the woodpile
one more day of their small music.
Soon everything will be clean
and bare, a fine inner blazing as the leaves
drop, and the air is tinged with oak
burning across the fields.
Let the skeletons of cornstalks
scrape in the wind
and sunflowers droop heavy heads
spilling their crowns of seeds.
Let the dew on the webs
gleam a thousand pearls
as the sun hazes its light
around everything we must lose.
Let the night build its darkness,
and earth close once more
and, at last, become quiet.
Endnote: This is a lovely poem about late autumn by Joseph Stroud. I love its elegiac meditative quality. It's from his collection Of This World: New and Selected Poems published by Copper Canyon Press (Bill Merwin's publisher).
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