Pages

Monday, September 21, 2020

The three of us spent yesterday morning out walking a section of the Eastern Trail that cuts along the salt marshes in Scarborough. Though migration has begun, plenty of birds were still around: we saw great white egrets, snowy egrets, great blue herons, and something that might have been a plover or a killdeer--it was hard to see its identifying markings. I was hoping for seals, but the tide was too low for them to be swimming in from the bay.

It's cold in the house this morning, but I can't bring myself to turn on the furnace yet. The days are sunny, rainless. Beneath the Norway maples the dry earth is cracked; the thin grass is burnt and brown. I carry pails of water to my new tree and shrubs. The drought goes on and on.

Today: editing, editing. I have a poetry group meeting tonight. I should read some Byron, I should wash some floors.

The loneliness is seeping in, through the cracks and planks. 

2 comments:

  1. ee cummings had it right.
    as much as I love, love, love fall, there is always a note of melancholy in the falling of the leaves.

    ReplyDelete
  2. That's so true. It's an elegiac season.

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for responding. I'll post your comment soon, as long as you're not a troll.