In the failing light of a
November evening,
kicking through the rotting
leaves on a suburban path,
I remember you, digging the
garden ridges, shaking out
the groundsel, tossing the stones
under the hedge.
Great events in your kingdom were
scurryings in the grass,
a thrush feeding on a worm,
raindrops falling from the apple trees.
Far from inspectors and reports,
you held sway over
the straightening of ridges,
regiments of onions and lettuces.
With each passing year, you are
buried deeper beneath memory,
becoming ever more intangible,
like these rotting leaves
that leave only their scent
hanging in the dank November air;
after all this time, you have
become more like a film I once saw.
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