Greye in the back "square" quiet place--PL, '15
Ahh! Sunday—at last. The first day of the week, and
the first day I haven’t had to go somewhere since last Monday. “But there’s
church,” you might think. No, I went to church yesterday—Saturday—for a
worship-service funeral.
On my way to retrieve the newspapers this morning, I
noticed the zinnias and lantana were already wilted, and the sun wasn’t even
out. Nothing to do but get the hose and water them, since there seemed to be no
help forthcoming in the weather department. Taking the hose back to the faucet afterwards,
I noticed all the south-side mums were either wilted, grass-overtaken, or dead.
So I watered the poor things, plus the marvelously-healthy Bermuda. Tomorrow….
Back on the front porch, I separated the adverts from both papers, took them
inside to the recycling box, then proceeded to read—journal and pen at the
ready. Sunday traffic is usually low in the morning; I was expecting a
lovely, cool, quiet start to the day.
Not gonna happen. The neighbor man,
dressed in what looked to be church clothes, drove into his driveway and
proceeded to vacuum out the family car. Or at least, he opened the passenger door and turned on something with a motor--a generator, perhaps? At the same time, his dog began its
incessant barking.
Not in the mood for these obtrusive elements, I
gathered all my paraphernalia and betook myself back through the house to the
backyard “square,” the place where the picnic table--brought over for the July
reunion—still sat. Under the spreading chestnu… hackberry tree it was, so the
table was not only the repository of crispy, brown leaves, but also folded lawn chairs
and stuff from the last repotting session.
A rag lay nearby, so I cleaned the plastic cloth
still there--anchored with old, old porcelain light fixtures--stood the
lawn chairs against the shed wall, and wiped down the rest of the table and the
benches.
Though
there were more back neighbors, counting those on Amelia Street, it was
blessedly quiet.
Which
way to face for my morning reading? Neither direction was what I’d call a
beauty spot: on the south was a near side of the shed, dead yarrow and
nearly-dead asters in front, and beyond, the hedge-row. Greenery, at least.
Facing
north, which I chose, was the neighbor’s newish privacy fence, and the huge
hackberry trunk with privet and Yellow Rose of Texas foliage beneath and beyond
it. Way off, across--but close to--Couchwood Street, an enormous pile of orangey,
red-clay dirt desecrated the once-pristine hayfield. But today, no machines
roared and beeped. Ah! As the old hymn goes, “Blessed quietness, Holy
quietness…” Except for the birds, for which I’m grateful.
Mid-morning,
with only coffee for sustenance so far, my tummy grumbled, so I toasted and
buttered two slices of raisin-cinnamon bread, grabbed the last cup of mandarin
oranges, and a handful of mixed nuts and called that breakfast. Soon, the
neighborhood began to stir. Doors opening and closing, voices, dogs barking. It
was time to move inside.
May we
all have quiet mornings this autumn—if we need them. And we do. Don’t we? I do.
3 comments:
Nice post. I, too, have considered myself adequately churched after a Saturday funeral, especially of the Anglican/Episcopal sort. My grandmother loved her flowers, and always hated to see fall and winter arrive because they would die. And yes, we all need those quiet mornings.
Glad to know (I probably already knew it) that others covet their quietness. Thanks for responding. xoxo
And such nice cool mornings. The weather and the beauty that is Couchwood surely lifted your spirits.
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