A single burnished leaf from the burr oak in the front yard floats down and comes to rest in the pot of bronze “mums” on the threshold of the little blue house in the village. Nights are cooling down, and it will not be long until we have to carry the pot indoors every evening as darkness falls and the wind rises.
As the oak leaf makes itself comfortable among our potted blooms, a long v-shaped skein of geese passes overhead. Above the wedge of high-flying geese and slightly to their right, the waning moon is translucent in the morning sky.
The swallows of summer are packing their bags and making ready to leave, their places on telephone wires to be taken by flutters of sparrows and constellations of starlings who are putting on winter stars and flashy yellow beaks.
Early Macintosh apples are starting to appear at farm markets, and several “Macs” rest flushed and rosy in a bowl on the kitchen counter. We carried a lovely big brown paper bag of apples home from a local orchard a few days ago, and most are destined for eating, but later there will be applesauce and pies. Perhaps there will be a few jars of cinnamon scented apple butter too.
No doubt about it—Lady Autumn is standing outside our gate, and she is rattling the rusty latch vigorously. The lady knows the magic words that will grant her entrance, and she knows the tune that goes with them.
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Autumn at the Gate
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2 comments:
Your prose is poetry. I can smell the cinnamon on apples already. So nice on a rainy morning here.
What a beautiful bowl of apples!
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