Dead leaves fall from a living tree, captured by a breeze, to gather at my feet tiny mounds of earth browns and ill-colored greens piled on one another / rustling / serpentine screams
tiny graveyards un-esteemed; reminding me of last evening's public television show (almost appalling)
a special / they called it on letters from the holocaust,
a reading / from surviving members now grey and slowing
as they speak (aging) in sepia slideshows during their somber, teary-eyed recollecting; lifting ghosts and rocks
heavy, from the moss of their memory silver photos of nannas, sisters, brothers and fathers lost fading details of the war
which time has (and they gladly) frost, depressing me with my big screen magnavox,
i remote control a pause...
&
still dead leaves of cemetary browns and soldier greens, lifeless and lifted by the wind without empathy / or guilt of sins
an airy power, a commanding force / unseen gathering / stems or limbs of these casualties / of autumn none following the flight
of concord cold fronts
clustering together / piled / inartistically at my sandals, toes wriggling crunching underneath my feet
weathered
death seems simple - like a mindless breeze, natural and indifferent dust devils
it is the way of things shifting graveyards of leaves as if a memorial of use-to-be's from a roar of sightless tragedies memorium of wars tombs of bodies / images of defeat
not so simple or beloved
the nature of such things in these leaves i see of thee i sing....