Raven's cough: adapting a line of Dylan Thomas's from "Especially when the October wind."
As though chidden of God: Thomas Hardy, from "Neutral Tones"
August
rhymes with autumn, and there are surely foretastes. Red leaves here, there, mornings in the 50s. September, though! --- summer often roars back, sultry, heavy, raging against its own dying. But daylight shrinks, leaves crispen and wither, and all the coffeeshops go pumpkin-spice, for Pete's sake. By Oscar Wilde's birthday in mid-October, we're all right. One can walk a mile or more without succumbing to heatstroke. And the foliage starts doing its thing, its annual flash and flare of colour and fire. Give me a year of October, maybe early November as well. I'm a sucker for Thomas Hardy bleakness; I swoon for the raven's cough in winter sticks; I thrill to the sun gone pale as though chidden of God.
Poetry by Uncle Meridian

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Written on 2022-08-24 at 04:37




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