An Evening Walk in Autumn
By hedgehog1
- 1272 reads
Slowly the setting sun fades into evening
Our track receding skirts by Long Wood
Beyond the trees, over the asphalt way
The pale stars were sliding into place
Too late now to turn back a different way
Fields filled the gloom and hid the path
As barbed wire that cuts fades out of sight
Silhouettes of Alder and Mountain Rowan
Reflecting like ice in the starlight's gleam
A Robin flies into the light of the setting sun
Its breast flashing red as a shooting star
We're half way home by the broken turnpike
Boots so heavy from walked in mud
The half moon slips ever skywards
As we stumble over the unploughed field
Safe the house beckons by the distant stream
With the wood smokes smell drifting by
Voices grow louder as we near journeys end
Reluctant to enter we sit under the starlight
As the enduring silence speaks a thousand words
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Comments
This is a perfect poem in
This is a perfect poem in every way Edward. Just loved the way you summed up the sights and atmosphere, I felt as if I were there.
By the way, loved that line:
A Robin flies into the light of the setting sun
Its breast flashing red as a shooting star
What a sight to behold.
Thank you for sharing this beauty.
Jenny.
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Beautiful autumnal feel. I
Beautiful autumnal feel. I could feel the fallen leaves beneath my feet, and smell that woodsmoke.
I wasn't sure about the line 'The half moon pale, slips ever skywards'. It's a lovely image, but the structure feels a bit forced. I couldn't see that putting 'pale' after 'half moon' rather than before made the line any better - the image is so strong in itself - and I stopped at 'slips ever skyward' because I automatically associate 'slips' with going down. I appreciate that it can also mean doing something quietly, almost unseen, and it works in that context, but for me it interrupted the flow a bit. Although using an unexpected word can add emphasis to the image, of course, so perhaps I'm being too literal here. I did enjoy it very much.
Apostrophe Police: 'It's breast flashing' should be its. Also I wasn't sure if 'wood smokes smell' should have an apostrophe?
I'll go and get on with my 'Bumper Book of Pedantry' now.
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Enjoyed, Edward. Felt like
Enjoyed, Edward. Felt like being taken on a real evening stroll, with the sunset and darkness encroaching, at the half-way point, so no point in retracing (wondering if one has a torch if the light is really going to fade?!) and the boots heavy with mud, and sitting in the silence before returning to everyday life indoors. Rhiannon
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Agree with Rhiannon, I was
Agree with Rhiannon, I was travelling with you too Hedgehog into the autumnal beauty and peace.
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