In summer in the country the married buzzards wheel and flow on languid wings, surveilling every inch of the earth below for unwary prey.
The sun tracks dawn to night over heat scorched land, ripening the grains and drying the hay, whilst in dense city living, the park tree-leaves rustle in summer symphony and sandlot infants scream and play, their mothers watching every move, no suntime siesta now and here.
And in dense packed city blocks mi casa es non su casa, open windows leak sound, and the smell of someoneβs motherβs cooking is treif at another table. In grander houses the front lawns now water-lack died-back brown, evidence of greener days gone past, wait for the fall's forgiving.
And yet and still in the mellow evenings neighbors talk to neighbors friendly asides, jokes, politesses, the leavenings that let us live together till the cool comes and the windows and the doors shut. We too hibernate till spring.