It’s autumn on the prairie. In the last few weeks, the
cottonwoods, elms, maples, have all turned from green to yellow, orange, and
red. It’s a short-lived burst of color out here, and the leaves soon drop to
the ground, covering every browning lawn in a blanket of gold. Driving through
Bismarck takes a little navigational know-how if you want to take full
advantage of the season. The old neighborhoods have wide avenues lined with
American Elms, their branches arching over the streets and interlacing far
above the cars and bicycles, forming a cathedral ceiling for those passing
below. Look up and you’ll see blue sky peeking through the gaps, and at the
right time, the sun turning each translucent leaf into a tiny pane of stained
glass. It’s like Harry Clarke designed it himself. If you take the right route, you can keep going through leafy tunnels much of
the way across town.
This has been a dry September, and the leaves, once they've finished rustling in the wind, are
satisfyingly crunchy underfoot. A fine dust blows through the air, a product of
dry leaves ground into nothingness. The soil is sending up dust, too, and
allergies have been predictably rampant.
Fall is the season of the church supper out here. Country
churches unfailingly host a community meal, often served on picnic tables in
the field outside, with mountains of roast beef, mashed potatoes, sweet yellow
buns, seventeen different kinds of pie, and coffee that flows unceasingly from
huge silver vats manned by elderly women. Bingo and horseshoes serve as
entertainment, though be wary of trying to beat any man sporting a cowboy hat –
he’ll know his way around a horseshoe throw. There’s almost always a thrift
sale with a baked goods counter set up nearby: whatever you do, don’t pass up a slice of eggy, sweet, creamy kuchen, especially if it was made by someone’s
grandmother.
With all the beauty of autumn, there is the knowledge that
at the end of these bright, colorful weeks, we will find winter. Winter here is
often harsh, frigid, bitter, and by the time we’re in the dark depths of
January, seemingly endless. Does anyone look forward to it? Best to enjoy the
gorgeous days we have now, with the sun warming the leaves, raising up the
smells unknown to any other season.
Percy Bysshe Shelley had the right idea, to approach the
chilling of the year with an optimistic note: to remember that if winter comes,
spring won’t be far behind.
610. Ode to the West Wind
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I
O WILD West
Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being
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Thou from whose unseen
presence the leaves dead
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Are driven like ghosts from an
enchanter fleeing,
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Yellow, and black, and
pale, and hectic red,
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Pestilence-stricken multitudes! O
thou
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Who chariotest to
their dark wintry bed
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The wingèd seeds, where they lie
cold and low,
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Each like a corpse
within its grave, until
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Thine azure sister of the Spring
shall blow
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Her clarion o'er the
dreaming earth, and fill
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(Driving sweet buds like flocks to
feed in air)
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With living hues and
odours plain and hill;
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Wild Spirit, which art moving
everywhere;
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Destroyer and preserver; hear, O
hear!
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II
Thou on whose stream, 'mid the steep sky's commotion,
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Loose clouds like
earth's decaying leaves are shed,
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Shook from the tangled boughs of
heaven and ocean,
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Angels of rain and
lightning! there are spread
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On the blue surface of thine airy
surge,
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Like the bright hair
uplifted from the head
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Of some fierce Mænad, even from
the dim verge
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Of the horizon to the
zenith's height,
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The locks of the approaching
storm. Thou dirge
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Of the dying year, to
which this closing night
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Will be the dome of a vast
sepulchre,
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Vaulted with all thy
congregated might
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Of vapours, from whose solid
atmosphere
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Black rain, and fire, and hail,
will burst: O hear!
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III
Thou who didst waken from his summer dreams
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The blue
Mediterranean, where he lay,
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Lull'd by the coil of his
crystàlline streams,
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Beside a pumice isle
in Baiæ's bay,
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And saw in sleep old palaces and
towers
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Quivering within the
wave's intenser day,
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All overgrown with azure moss, and
flowers
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So sweet, the sense
faints picturing them! Thou
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For whose path the Atlantic's
level powers
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Cleave themselves into
chasms, while far below
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The sea-blooms and the oozy woods
which wear
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The sapless foliage of
the ocean, know
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Thy voice, and suddenly grow gray
with fear,
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And tremble and despoil
themselves: O hear!
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IV
If I were a dead leaf thou mightest bear;
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If I were a swift
cloud to fly with thee;
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A wave to pant beneath thy power,
and share
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The impulse of thy
strength, only less free
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Than thou, O uncontrollable! if
even
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I were as in my
boyhood, and could be
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The comrade of thy wanderings over
heaven,
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As then, when to
outstrip thy skiey speed
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Scarce seem'd a vision—I would
ne'er have striven
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As thus with thee in
prayer in my sore need.
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O! lift me as a wave, a leaf, a
cloud!
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I fall upon the thorns
of life! I bleed!
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A heavy weight of hours has
chain'd and bow'd
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One too like thee—tameless, and
swift, and proud.
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V
Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:
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What if my leaves are
falling like its own?
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The tumult of thy mighty harmonies
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Will take from both a
deep autumnal tone,
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Sweet though in sadness. Be thou,
Spirit fierce,
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My spirit! Be thou me,
impetuous one!
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Drive my dead thoughts over the
universe,
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Like wither'd leaves,
to quicken a new birth;
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And, by the incantation of this
verse,
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Scatter, as from an
unextinguish'd hearth
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Ashes and sparks, my words among
mankind!
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Be through my lips to
unawaken'd earth
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The trumpet of a prophecy! O Wind,
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If Winter comes, can Spring be far
behind?
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A big shout out to the publishers of Soundings, as well as Miss Harte and her Leaving Cert English class of 1998. We never covered Yeats in time, so some of us missed out on valuable points, possibly a place in medicine at UCC, but look at us all now - we're fine. Totally fine.
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