Consecration

                 Consecration

Modern poetry modern verse contemporary poetry contemporary verse modern poem contemporary poem

The autumn is the most religious time

Of seasons.  Fall is when we do not strain

To feel the specter’s spectre’s breath.  A wan green slime

Across a summer pond is like a stain

On soul.  The same pond covered thin with ice

In winter does not call our piths to spirit prayer.

The spring is more a promise, an advice.

The autumn shouts out holiness, a blare

Of sacred colors where there once was green

Unendingly almost.  A boredom fell

Across that landscape as a fate serene

Too like a tongueless country church’s bell.

  The autumn only with Elijah hues

    Can fulminate prophetic hallowed views.

Phillip Whidden