By Jack Slocomb
Must be that turn of year,
days more dimly drawn,
nib of freeze in the tighter
twines of air,
for those fat black polished
crickets to be in high gear
in their frenzied
lofty springing in and out
of the weave of
drooping grasses
along the loose gravel lane
when I scuff too near
Must be the last burst
of the fiery spirits of summer
before the
dropping,
dropping,
dropping,
dropping
of leaves
My leaning is to
find the revelation
in such recurring liturgies as these,
of the way they aver
one another,
the way they
befall in the same embrace of time,
yet I can only ask and ask,
all the while tasting
in the breezes that such fathoming
cannot ever be mine
And that is the abiding comfort