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leaves

Today's prompt was a poem by William Carlos Williams, "The Widow's Lament in Springtime." It included a lot of nature imagery along with a sense of inability to be moved by the beauty of it. I can relate to that.

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I started watching for the leaves to change

noticed the days getting shorter

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but then forgot the leaves

until they looked all afire

as I drove down the highway

one day all green

and burning yellow the next it seemed

As if they transformed suddenly

but really I just opened my eyes

taking my surviving child

back to college after Thanksgiving

long enough to notice them

and then returned to forgetting

There's a red carpet of

Japanese maple leaves

from the tree by the driveway

Aren't those leaves usually green

in the autumn before they fall?

I check the year-long research booklets

my kids made in Montessori second grade,

studying that tree when each was age seven —

my older child, my survivor, in 2006-2007,

my younger, now gone, 2008-2009 —

and yes, they reported the leaves were red when they were spring-new

and lost coloring through the summer and fall.

Each seasonal photo of kid with tree for proof.

We took note because it was opposite of all the other trees.

I wonder why they're still red this year?

Some ratio of rain and cold

of temperature and time

I study each of the photos in the booklets

seeking the secrets of life.

A late hard frost in 2007. A doubling in height by 2009.

Rader's end-of-year conclusion:

"I am glad the tree is in my front yard, so that even though

I am finished with my observations for this book,

I can still watch it grow."

I can still watch it grow.

Friday 11.30.18
Posted by Susan Ward
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