Monday 29 March 2010

'Leaves In Autumn' by Kieran Corcoran


Floating forth from father-branch they came,

The same in form as friends before and after,

Riding rafters, racers round roads unknown to crafter;

Thrust by breezes' laughter, building Autumn's fame

Came the tree's debris set free: these falling leaves

Bereave the ageing year's near neighbour:

To restore from hoar the life before is but lost labour -

Winter's ways won't heed reprieves.


So we see the panoply of season's shrinking,

Driving death's breath down through the world;

Hurled high to lofty ledges too.

But through the bluster bursts Spring's beauty winking,

Knowing the notion now to be unfurled:

Nothing tires that time cannot renew.


Kieran is an undergraduate studying English at Cambridge University.

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