The Lost Words by Colleen Keating

   

“Miracle” by Kathe Davis

Maybe
the burning bush
was just autumn 

it would have been
enough 

 

Tanka from my garden

Can you see the first four leaves setting the pace with Autumn on its way?

autumn watching
the first four amber leaves  
in our oak tree 
pink and grey galahs
feast on hanging acorns 


autumnal music  (publ. in Fire on Water)
I thought I knew the sound  
its rustic ring  
its tingle 
down 
my spine 
its warm gurgle  in my feet 
and hands 
its whisper
at the nape of my neck
and satisfying sighs pulsing 
cool and crisp and clear

yet autumn always shocks 
its soul-satisfying crunches 
and munches and moans 
wild wind in corridors 
and howls through window gaps
its rhyming rustle tones
with snicks and snaps and cracks 
always surprise
as I listen 
to the easy drift of vesper leaves
settling to a hush

CONKERS

   

 

Autumn walk in England

in the beginning
rugged up against the air’s frosty fingers
they stomp the crispy crunch
of autumnal earth

 then along the bridleway 
in search of conker trees 
the children scamper 
running this way and that 
when the conker tree is found.

excitedly we stop and look up 
its big arms reaching out 
whispers climb me climb me
and the conkers wait
like furry animals
for a good shake  to wake
and awake they come ping ponging down 

these prickly popping conkers 
in large exuberant handfuls 
are chased and counted
as our day is written on 
by these children
with commas, question 
and exclamation marks 
and ticked by amazement.

And with our little English Grandchildren we sing

Leaves are Falling

(tune-Jingle bells) 

Leaves are falling,
Leaves are falling, 
One fell on my nose!

Leaves are falling,
Leaves are falling,
One fell on my toes!

Leaves are falling,
Leaves are falling,
One fell on my head!

Leaves are falling,
leaves are falling,
Yellow, orange and red!

 

The following poem is from a gorgeous book called

The Lost Words

by Robert Macfarlane &  Jackie French

The book is actually a collection of words put to poetry that are actually be deleted, erased from the English Dictionary  and it seems devastating that words like acorn, willow , fern and some common birds are being sacrificed for the new modern words of today. Children still need to know the language of their natural world.  Here is the poem and illustration for the Conker from the book.