I think what Edward Hirsch manages to do in this poem is illuminate a little how and why autumn is the most poetic season.
Fall - Edward Hirsch
Fall, falling, fallen. That’s the
way the season
Changes its tense in the
long-haired maples
That dot the road; the veiny
hand-shaped leaves
Redden on their branches (in a
fiery competition
With the final remaining
cardinals) and then
Begin to sidle and float through
the air, at last
Settling into colorful layers
carpeting the ground.
At twilight the light, too, is
layered in the trees
In a season of odd, dusky
congruences—a scarlet tanager
And the odor of burning leaves, a
golden retriever
Loping down the center of a wide
street and the sun
Setting behind smoke-filled trees
in the distance,
A gap opening up in the treetops
and a bruised cloud
Blamelessly filling the space
with purples. Everything
Changes and moves in the split second
between summer’s
Sprawling past and winter’s hard
revision, one moment
Pulling out of the station
according to schedule,
Another moment arriving on the
next platform. It
Happens almost like clockwork:
the leaves drift away
From their branches and gather
slowly at our feet,
Sliding over our ankles, and the
season begins moving
Around us even as its colorful
weather moves us,
Even as it pulls us into its
dusty, twilit pockets.
And every year there is a brief,
startling moment
When we pause in the middle of a
long walk home and
Suddenly feel something invisible
and weightless
Touching our shoulders, sweeping
down from the air:
It is the autumn wind pressing
against our bodies;
It is the changing light of fall
falling on us.
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