I sometimes walk the neighborhoods near city hall during the lunch hour, trying to calm my mind from the troubles of the office. On one such walk I beheld, on the ground, a beautiful maple leaf in the process of transforming from Summer’s green to Fall’s crimson hues. I regarded her as the quintessence of natural beauty, and could not resist both scooping her up and writing this poem.
MAPLE LEAF
A leaf,
a many-pointed Maple,
demanded
that I look down
and see her,
her splashes of swirling colors,
laying with feigned humility
on a bed of matted elms,
paper-bag-brown.
She lay unspeaking,
satisfied to be admired,
to not be drab,
satisfied that I was tempted
to stoop and handle her,
satisfied with my sighs.
I could not walk away
and not take her with me.
(I did not have a camera with me as I walked, but the maple leaf pictured above is an acceptable substitute, found during a walk in Ophir Canyon.)
Beautiful poem Roger
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Thank you!
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