In the hammock out back, under white skies
veined with mostly-naked limbs and branches reaching up
into the still-cold air, despite
the sun's up there somewhere. Each burst of breeze
disturbs the stillness, sends the tips of branches
reeling, swaying, lifts a ghostly rustle through
the few leaves still remaining, clinging
to what's left of autumn, wondering
what fall is for. Another breeze
comes by, and they decide: another
tiny squad of leaves, bails out
in unison, on signal Go
the target's
coming up below! but off
they wheel, so graceful, whirled
in pirouettes
like asymmetric pinwheel heads
to fall so slow, they spin
so fast, they almost blur
as down they come,
and here they come
off-target, just a bit to left
and overhead, and
further off
toward no one
descending, fanning out
from so far up above. You'd think that
one, at least
of these last leaves
could land on me,
to bring dry, whispery love.
There aren't very many chances
left, and I am not quite yet
happy enough.
3 comments:
This was gorgeous.
Thank you, Mel!
:-D
I almost didn't write this poem. Coming in from outside, bustling with imagery, I was like "ahhh...this feels a bit cliche, innit? Hammocks, falling leaves, IMAGERY." It felt all a bit too done by me previously.
I'm very glad I overcame my momentary bout of artistic preciousness. Next time it happens, I hope I remember to kick myself and write the thing.
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