Two Autumnal Poems
November
White frost huddles in long shadows the sun flings across lawns. Last leaves are golden-yellow, brown.
There should be smoke, woodsmoke, leafsmoke curling to hang in air, and someone selling chestnuts.
Mortality
It’s warm today; sun evoking autumnal glow Yellow and golden-brown and green all on one tree And a Maple splash of scarlet; the sky clear But the blue a little faint, shy, and moist; Leaves beginning to fall. They all will fall, And there will be a day when even the poplar Will be silent, black, and still.
My leaves have been falling long unnoticed Until weakened muscles and a tiredness I could not at all explain Made their mark, though inside This autumnal glow is as alive as then: Beeches echoing the rise of the sun; Between strokes and with geese overhead The rowing eight’s bow singing on a quiet river; Warm silence in a secluded garden; My sweetheart’s breasts; The vast darkness and tiny candles In the great cathedral; the silence, inside and out, As my father died; new life emerging From a womb; and music- at dusk the cello Through an open window bringing me to stop, To listen, and when the music ended, it did not end. And such astonishment at the words of Eliot and Hesse, knowing the truth must be near For I felt it in my blood.
How many more autumnal days How many more autumns now Until the last leaf falls. Mortality mortality, what does it mean?
Reprinted by permission of Parabola (the Magazine “Where Spiritual Traditions Meet”) where it appeared in the Summer 2010 issue, vol 35 no 2.
Tilo Ulbricht
Photograph © Copyright David Lally and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence