Autumn and Age
by Greg Van Hee
Autumn came last night--
a raucous middle-aged harlot
garishly gowned in red and orange,
her cold fingers killing
green warmth wherever she touched,
her cynical to-hell-with-you attitude
laughing at summer’s last weak defenses,
but her heavily painted face
could not hide the wrinkles.
I used to love her cool promenade:
in her transient visits, so much promised,
but she always opened doors rushing in,
stayed a short while and didn’t bother
closing them on the way out.
I’ve learned to see her sudden aging,
to feel death in her casual caresses,
to despise the insincerity of her
brief gestures of momentary reprieves--
false promises of a Phoenix
soon to die in icy white ashes.
No longer her masquerades beguile me:
now I understand her futile pretenses
and how they mock my own preoccupation--
the desperate self-delusion
about age as a matter of the mind.