Wednesday, 1 October 2025

'The chestnut pattering to the ground...'

 October already, and both the Rev. Richard Coles and Bryan Appleyard have posted Robert Frost's 'October' on Facebook (great minds, etc.). 
The advance of autumn affects poets in different ways. Emily Brontë positively welcomes it, complete with its promise of winter to come –

Fall, leaves, fall; die, flowers, away;
Lengthen night and shorten day;
Every leaf speaks bliss to me
Fluttering from the autumn tree.
I shall smile when wreaths of snow
Blossom where the rose should grow;
I shall sing when night’s decay
Ushers in a drearier day.

But the general autumn mood is, of course, one of melancholy, of 'languid grief'. Here's Dante Gabriel Rossetti going for it, in his 'Autumn Song' –

Know'st thou not at the fall of the leaf
How the heart feels a languid grief
Laid on it for a covering,
And how sleep seems a goodly thing
In Autumn at the fall of the leaf?

And how the swift beat of the brain
Falters because it is in vain,
In Autumn at the fall of the leaf
Knowest thou not? and how the chief
Of joys seems—not to suffer pain?

Know'st thou not at the fall of the leaf
How the soul feels like a dried sheaf
Bound up at length for harvesting,
And how death seems a comely thing
In Autumn at the fall of the leaf?


But for me the most beautiful lines of autumn verse – apart from the supreme autumn poem, Keats's great ode – are these, from Tennyson's 'In Memoriam', recalling an autumn morning on the Lincolnshire Wolds...

Calm is the morn without a sound,
         Calm as to suit a calmer grief,
         And only thro' the faded leaf
The chestnut pattering to the ground:

Calm and deep peace on this high wold,
         And on these dews that drench the furze.
         And all the silvery gossamers
That twinkle into green and gold:

Calm and still light on yon great plain
         That sweeps with all its autumn bowers,
         And crowded farms and lessening towers,
To mingle with the bounding main:

Calm and deep peace in this wide air,
         These leaves that redden to the fall;
         And in my heart, if calm at all,
If any calm, a calm despair.