Late in the day the sun sighed.
The lake sparkled as if polished.
The ducks did not notice
a salmon-colored sky as it unfolded—
but a loon did.
The lake sparkled as if polished.
The ducks did not notice
a salmon-colored sky as it unfolded—
but a loon did.
As the sun fell from the sky
a fading twilight filled the horizon.
At family gatherings a campfire
blazed and crackled,
filling the air with popping
embers and wisps of smoke.
Dancers arrive in the shadows,
people of the past,
linking hands, they spin
to the plaintive fire’s song.
And then they are gone.
Nothing is the same:
the empty swing,
a broken lawn chair,
the vacant cottage.
A restless loon flutters,
its wings beat anxiously,
as it desperately tries to hold
onto the last remnants
of the fading day,
unwilling to succumb
to the encroaching night.
By Steven Wade Veatch
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