Autumn's Fall
by Kerrie Hardie
It seems the rain will be its end - the smell
of rotting-down in ditches, under trees,
the sharp scent of late apples in wet grass,
the spent leaves guttering in the stone-flagged well.
The spaces in the branches stretch and grow.
High spiralling of crows in thin sky.
The grey drift of the distance. Nothing more
Of hope or exultation in the flow
of damp air from the windows that I leave
to let the year move quietly through the house
preparing for the long dark and the cold,
loosening the nets spent thoughts still weave,
clinging as cobwebs. There must be space for death,
and witness for this seep of emptying light;
for winter, pressing with the cattle at the gate,
clouding the darkness with their frightened breath.