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Poem of the month: September 2022

September 6, 2022 Jessica Pizzo

“What I’ll think about in winter”

by Jessica Pizzo Brix

 

 

A bevy of swans approaches,

thunderous white cloud over Delaney Pond.

It’s December, and while nothing is frozen,

 the earth is hard.

 

Alleys of ferns and mugwort

have given their last bow.

Sharp-winged barn swallows have flown south,

and the beavers at Horse Meadow

have boarded up their lodge for winter.

Harvard is the color of straw, wheat and flax

tinged with snowflakes and rot,

prophets of what lies ahead.

 

But today,

I’m thinking of strawberries, sirens of the season, pulled

like rubies from the ground at Old Frog Pond.

The tart explosion of blueberries,

moving fistful to mouth,

wayward from any bucket’s fate.

The warm flesh of a Carlson’s peach,

a vibrant reminder that we’re alive and dust, at once.

Raspberries, oh raspberries, noblest of summer fruits.

To demand a delicate touch while being plucked

from prickly vines, mere minutes before meeting their fate

as finger hats.

Plums from Westward Orchards

bearing names of heroes and knights –  

Santa Rosa, Castleton and Red Heart –

and baked into frangipane.

The scent of a thousand Italian summers

in my very own backyard.

 

These gifts live on,

preserved in time and the literal sense

as jams, pies and in the freezer below. I’ll dip into them,

savor their muted perfume

and imagine myself among the

cosmos and goldenrod again.

 

For now, the swans approach their journey's end:

a half-frozen pond where pickerel and bass

lay sleeping below, their winter wings

keeping every kind of time.

In Lifestyle, Exploration, Natural Living Tags Poetry, Seasons
Comment

Weekly Words: "And Now it's October"

October 20, 2015 Jessica Pizzo

"the golden hour of the clock of the year. Everything that can run
to fruit has already done so: round apples, oval plums, bottom-heavy
pears, black walnuts and hickory nuts annealed in their shells,
the woodchuck with his overcoat of fat. Flowers that were once bright
as a box of crayons are now seed heads and thistle down. All the feathery
grasses shine in the slanted light. It’s time to bring in the lawn chairs
and wind chimes, time to draw the drapes against the wind, time to hunker
down. Summer’s fruits are preserved in syrup, but nothing can stopper time.
No way to seal it in wax or amber; it slides though our hands like a rope
of silk. At night, the moon’s restless searchlight sweeps across the sky."

- Barbara Crooker

In Natural Living, Lifestyle Tags Poetry, Fall, Moon, Change, Seasons
1 Comment

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