It has only just started. The white-ash tree in front of our house has survived the white-ash bore that has killed so many of its kind here in Michigan and it is the first to turn colors in the fall. It usually comes out in a blazing yellow, though some years it has worn the most becoming shade of peach.
The maples are still mostly green but some have adorned themselves with a splash of bright red. It is not yet peak season, here in Michigan, but it is lovely. It was cold last week, yet it has warmed up this weekend to give us something of an Indian Summer.
Autumn comes and goes but the splendor of it is not lost on me, especially since the last one I saw was three years ago this October when I left for my teaching job in the Emirates. As much as I may despise winter that follows it, the fall is truly lovely and in America we have such wonderful traditions that involve the fall: visits to the orchards, pumpkin pie, apple cider, walks in the woods under the colorful canopy of turning leaves and stories--especially stories! (I'll be recording my paraphrase of the Legend of Sleepy Hollow to listen to here--not at all related to the Tim Burton version, but the real honest to goodness Washington Irving version. I will do this at a later date and it will be in two parts.) Other stories I love at this time of the year are, of course, Little Orphan Annie, by James Wibcome Riley; The Halloween Tree, by Ray Bradbury--oh, and I just read a really good one by Neil Gaimon called, The Graveyard book. There are many, many more. Oh and yes, let's not forget to watch Tim Burton's A Nightmare Before Christmas which I have always enjoyed along with his Corpse Bride.
Besides Halloween, I love the cool fresh air and the sweet melancholy that seems to be born on the first smell of wood smoke from fire places and in the slant of light and in the sound of the rustle of leaves that crunch underfoot--and I don't know what it is about the season that fills me with memories of my childhood and a sense of loss and longing. It is a powerful season and full of magic, mystery and wonder. And it is not hard to imagine--even feel-- the grief of Demeter roaming the earth looking for her daughter who was taken into the underworld--she would not, nor ever be consoled for that loss and so she withholds her blessing and the world grows dark and nothing will grow. Demeter is in the air and in the harvest and in the chill that goes up your spine.
1 comment:
Gorgeous! You've really captured the sense of fall here. I wonder if being overseas makes us more acutely aware of all the specialness of fall that is happening around us- kind of like loving rain all of a sudden and see it as a life giving force isn't of a 'keep me indoors' force. Love the blog, Ken! And nice to see you doing so well back home in Michigan.
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