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MID-NOVEMBER
and the wind is having its way with the trees, their leaves littering the ground with gold. The cold air resonates with crows making casual conversation, mocking remarks. As the woods thin, the bones become visible, and smoke from the chimneys braids hand over hand, almost reaching the clouds. This is the pause in the calendar, before the holidays’ razzle-dazzle gives way to winter, the year’s interior. The sun sinks in the west, a teabag in hot water; citrus and cinnamon fill the room. Pull up a chair, and sit by the fire. Night comes quickly now, the click of a camera shutter. From the copse on the edge of the meadow, a murmuration of starlings, a river of birds, clamorous cacophony, weaving and unweaving the air.
Barbara Crooker |
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