The heat of autumn

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It was such an unusually cool, damp August in the Berkshires, I think most of us gave up on summer before Labor Day. The trees were already starting to turn. It was too chilly to have dinner on the porch. Every once in a while, the furnace would kick in — a familiar yet ominous sound, like a phone call late at night. And then last weekend summer came rushing back, swirling warm breezes, singing through the reopened screen windows: I’m here! I’m home! And we forgave and tried to forget, wanting to believe it was so. I took a long swim at a favorite pond. The water was warm as a bath, the sky mid-summer blue. It was wonderful but also disconcerting. Like the genie’s last wish. The third shake of the monkey’s paw. Or anything we know in our hearts is just too good to last.

The Heat of Autumn

Jane Hirshfield

The heat of autumn
is different from the heat of summer.
One ripens apples, the other turns them to cider.
One is a dock you walk out on,
the other the spine of a thin swimming horse
and the river each day a full measure colder.
A man with cancer leaves his wife for his lover.
Before he goes she straightens his belts in the closet,
rearranges the socks and sweaters inside the dresser
by color. That’s autumn heat:
her hand placing silver buckles with silver,
gold buckles with gold, setting each
on the hook it belongs on in a closet soon to be empty,
and calling it pleasure.

9 Comments

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  • Your reflections sound like a poem! Do they experience this same holding on I wonder on the west coast? Season’s are a kind of mixed blessing providing us with real reminders of time passing. I swam in the ocean last Sunday and noticed how many people lingered on the beach as the sun set.

    • Yes, I love having four seasons — “O suns and skies and clouds of June/And flowers of June together/Cannot rival for one hour/October’s bright blue weather.” Helen Hunt Jackson by way of Virginia Childs Gyllenhaal

    • They are kind of a mixed blessing for sure. Not sure I thought of it that way. It is hard when they pass, especially one’s favorites. You know it will be another year till it comes back….

  • I know just what you felt and what you mean.

    You want to hold on to it, maybe even buy something that says summer, though you may only be able to wear it once this season.

    Beata

By Liza

Liza

Liza Bennett attended the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She is a former advertising and publishing executive. She founded Bennett Book Advertising, Inc. (now, Verso Advertising), which specialized in book publishing accounts and built it into the industry leader. Since selling the agency, she has had four novels published, all of which are set in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts, where she lives half the year.

In addition to having served as the Chair of the Academy of American Poets, on its Executive Committee, and Emeritus Circle, Bennett serves on the board of the Friends of the West Stockbridge Library and is secretary of the West Stockbridge Historical Society.