Tuesday, 22 October 2024

A Couple of Autumn Poems

 After a summer which rarely looked the part, and often felt more like winter, at least Autumn is putting on a good show of being autumn, enhanced by some welcome late sunlight. It's a season that has always been popular with poets, though all must labour in the shadow of Keats's glorious 'Ode to Autumn'. 
Here are two contrasting takes on autumn: first John Clare, in upbeat mood, celebrating the season –

I love the fitfull gust that shakes
 The casement all the day
And from the mossy elm tree takes
 The faded leaf away
Twirling it by the window-pane
With thousand others down the lane

I love to see the shaking twig
 Dance till the shut of eve
The sparrow on the cottage rig
 Whose chirp would make believe
That spring was just now flirting by
In summers lap with flowers to lie

I love to see the cottage smoke
 Curl upwards through the naked trees
The pigeons nestled round the coat
 On dull November days like these
The cock upon the dung-hill crowing
The mill sails on the heath a-going

The feather from the ravens breast
 Falls on the stubble lea
The acorns near the old crows nest
 Fall pattering down the tree
The grunting pigs that wait for all
Scramble and hurry where they fall

And here is Philip Larkin – never much of a one for the celebratory mood – describing an urban autumn, in an oddly broken-backed sonnet: 

And now the leaves suddenly lose strength.
Decaying towers stand still, lurid, lanes-long,
And seen from landing windows, or the length
Of gardens, rubricate afternoons. New strong
Rain-bearing night-winds come: then
Leaves chase warm buses, speckle statued air,
Pile up in corners, fetch out vague broomed men
Through mists at morning.
         And no matter where goes down,
The sallow lapsing drift in fields
Or squares behind hoardings, all men hesitate
Separately, always, seeing another year gone –
Frockcoated gentleman, farmer at his gate,
Villein with mattock, soldiers on their shields,
All silent, watching the winter coming on.


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