A poem about Autumn, this one. It’s the kind of thing I’d usually write and then forget about, only to discover it sometime later and add it on here…in Spring. Not this time though! This time, I’m unusually on the ball!
‘Leaves on the grass’ was written after a particularly strenuous weekend of clearing leaves from our back garden. I felt rather pleased with myself for doing it, if I’m honest, as it’s the kind of job that is usually left to wait by me. Then, I end up having to do it in the freezing cold of late November or early December when the ground is wet and I end up filthy and soaked. This year though, it was a spur of the moment decision on a particularly sunny weekend when I felt a bit more energetic than usual. And so, old clothes on and gardening gloves firmly in place, I dragged our brown bin onto the lawn and got cracking.
The resultant poem came after when I felt thoroughly work out by my exertions. Here you go.
Leaves on the grass. First, it's leaves on the grass, suddenly noticeable, a dozen at most but added to daily and then, months after shedding blossom, small brown, red, green eye shapes decorate the edges of the tarmac on the driveway, escaping in the coming days onto the car, the road and when you look again the falling Autumn rain seems to gradually erase all colour, like a life slowly sliding away, too weak to fight, too old to care anymore, too afraid of losing all dignity to heave on anything too bright, visible again by scrolling through images on a phone, a reminder of a distant rousing prime, gone, but not quite forgotten, stirred occasionally by the thrilling glee of a fresh bright morning when the fountain of youth seems to flow without fear and we stride out and marvel at the amber and gold before it leaves us again and we brace ourselves, steeled for the cold and the dark of what comes next.
There is a more thoughtful side to the poem. It’s not just about Autumn in that I’ve tried to add something about ageing and life in there too. I think a nod to Gillian Clarke’s poem ‘October’ must be given here as I’ve tried to look at similar themes, if only briefly.
I tried to capture the sense of getting older here – perhaps after feeling so bloody tired once I’d finished doing the leaves – as well as the feelings I regularly have about being so tired out by things that wouldn’t have normally had such a great effect on me. So, there’s a brief few lines about getting older (Autumn being late in the year) and catching sight of your younger self in photographs. This was after my wife sent me a photo of me at my son’s nursery sports day, some time ago. It shocked me to see just how young I looked and made me think about maybe feeling slightly self conscious (or just even more self conscious) I’ve become after a health scare.
Hopefully, the poem ends on a cheerful, hopeful note. There are lines about going out for a walk in the bright, bracing cold of an Autumn day and enjoying the vivid colours of the season and I think that’s me being about as optimistic as I ever get.
Anyway, I hope you enjoyed the poem. Feel free to leave some feedback as I always enjoy reading people’s comments.
You have reminded me to sort my garden. I do love fallen leaves but they turn to mush. Aging is constantly on my mind these days. Great writing!
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