We have gone on a couple of fall drives in the past couple of weeks. We love fall. We love the colors. We love the majesty of it all. The following words came to me at I see these incredible views, mostly from a far.
The bursting
of fall
Fall mostly comes quickly, usually after school starts
and daylight savings time nears
its reluctant
entry into our lives.
The sides of steep
and sloping mountains
and deep and
shallow ravines burst
into reds, oranges,
burnt sienna, and yellows.
sometimes meshed
like yarn in a kaleidoscope tie.
Often, we stop
along the road in a safe place
or on a dirt
road that runs up to a locked gate or fence, laden
with a rusted
chain and lock, brittle weeds, or sagging fence line.
The fences are generally
high, hopefully keeping the deer
from bounding over
and onto the busy road, especially at night.
Some are great
leapers and make it across,
only to face oncoming
traffic and death.
I love the reds and oranges the most,
their vibrancy
overwhelming my sense of calm and revelry.
I sometimes
wonder, though, who decided on the colors,
the majesty of
it all flowing so perfectly and decidedly
in the eternal equation
of time—first, one day at 98 degrees,
then the next plummeting
to 32 at night,
thwarting all living
sap from flowing anywhere,
causing the various
shades of colors and extravagant hues.
It is the night
coldness in the dark and behind the scenes
that creates the
flagrancy of colors on hillsides in the day
and in ravines
and between green pines and golden quakies.
I still ease
out of traffic onto the shoulder and dirt roads,
close to the
fence, rock-laden paths, thistles, and grass,
just to be
alone with creative colors and their Creator.
Darrel L.
Hammon
September 2020
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