The month is half gone. According to my copy of The Pagan Book of Days, “In ancient Rome, the tradition of Winter’s Day was held a day later than in the north. Here, the season of combat ended, and weapons were put away until the following year.” I don’t like pondering about the kind of world in which combat had a season. It seems to imply combat always occurring somewhere but perhaps it was like boxing under the Queensbury rules.
October’s fields
Photo by J. Harrington
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Once again this week I neglected to post the contents of our Community Supported Agriculture [CSA] share box on the day we picked it up. The excitement of the season’s first snow fall took precedence so here’s the list of goodies we got yesterday, in our penultimate share:
- APPLES
- CABBAGE, CAULIFLOWER, or BROCCOLI [we got cauliflower]
- DELICATA SQUASH
- GREEN ONIONS
- GREEN TOMATOES
- RAINBOW CHARD and
- WINTER SQUASH SURPRISE [blue hubbard, red kuri, or turban]
Next Friday we collect the final box of veggies. It truly marks the end of summer and this year’s growing season. We could be sad, and we may let such feelings prevail for a day or two, but we’ll be quickly moving into a period full of holidays, plus the insanity of the upcoming election, so the philosophy of “life goes on” will soon dominate. There’ll be Halloween candy to eat and share at Samhain, drumsticks at Thanksgiving and presents to share at Christmas, plus whatever the Pagan Book lists during the next several months. We’re not Caesar, the Ides aren’t yet falling in March, so we’ll cross our fingers, hope for the best, and enjoy as much as we can of the rest of the year.
Late October
By Maya Angelou
Carefully
the leaves of autumn
sprinkle down the tinny
sound of little dyings
and skies sated
of ruddy sunsets
or roseate dawns
roil ceaselessly in
cobweb greys and turn
to black
for comfort.
Only lovers
see the fall
a signal end to endings
a gruffish gesture alerting
those who will not be alarmed
that we begin to stop
in order simply
to begin
again.
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Please be kind to each other while you can.
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