David Chorlton
There’s a thin skin of air
lying over the pond
where dragonflies float
in September.
A Common Green Darner,
light as a wish,
with one wing for minutes
and one for the hours,
marks time as it crosses the water.
Summer goes slowly
down to the carp;
a year drifts away
to the mountain. The heat’s lost
its edge, shadows
have teeth, while
two hawks in place
for the cool time of year
are quotation marks
for a silence as wide
as the sky,
and a vulture
hangs on a thread
down from the lingering sun.
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