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Leafless in Hamilton

Sometimes Wonder Looks Like This

trees in our neighborhood busied themselves
for weeks this autumn, first merely hinting at
and then blazing with color,
then no sooner blazing
than losing their leaves to wind
or rain, or both.
day after day, leaves fell all over the place,
dried in yards, skittered on our street,
crackled under our feet
and found their way into our home
caught on our shoes or pulled
in with the sweep of a door.
rakes were in motion, leaf bags were filled,
trees became naked.

not the japanese maple, though,
not the japanese maple
in the shade garden next door.
she stayed resplendently brilliant
vibrantly scarlet
and fully dressed
no giving in to peer pressure, that gal!
outlasting others and infusing
the northeastern-facing rooms of our home
with a luminous rosy glow, day after day,
last one bedecked in finery.

until today.
today, a perfectly still november day
bright with sunshine,
after the overnight temperature dipped
below freezing
for the first time since summer.
today is the day
a most unexpected
and silently magnanimous show
takes place:

without complaint,
without resistance,
without trumpet voluntary,
without news reporters’ swarming, and,
notably, without any air movement whatsoever,
she stands elegantly motionless as
one

by one
by one—
but all in a single spectacular day!—
her leaves drop away
with only the barest whisper of a landing
to create a resplendently brilliant
vibrantly scarlet
generously tiered and ruffled
flamenco skirt in a swirl around her

on the ground.

i am riveted with wonder,
a witness to the grace
of transition
from
shade tree
to naked tree,
from
attached
to not attached,
from
fearless this
to fearless that.
right before my eyes!
the leaves drop with only the
barest sacred whisper of a landing
on the ground of my being.

dotty seiter

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The Barest Sacred Whisper
3 x 3″; watercolor and watercolor pencil on paper
#34 in a color swatch series
2025

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Notes about poem and art:
• So very grateful that my eyes were wide open to wonder on November 10. Words can only begin to approximate the wonder, but words are what I have so words are what I use here with humility.
• Bring on a range of reds! I thank the Japanese maple and dogwood leaves—side-by-side neighbors—who volunteered to pose for The Barest.







11 responses to “Leafless in Hamilton”

  1. Joyful Puttering Avatar
    Joyful Puttering

    What a fabulously wonderful post. I remember seeing a Japanese maple on a walk…still holding onto its red leaves. I didn’t it was one of those unique trees that drop their leaves in just one day. You captured the sensory experience so well and I can picture it perfectly! Thank you for tuning me into this special tree and for capturing the beauty in swatch #34.

    I’m going to find that maple again…and watch it next year!

    I had a ginkgo tree in my front yard in Lexington….and it dropped all its leaves in one day too. I may not have noticed the first few years…but it didn’t take long for me to catch on. I did a little research so I would know when to be watching for it….and I looked forward to Ginkgo Day every year. I celebrated it each time often times standing or dancing in the falling leaves and once even trying to making ginkgo angels in the yellow carpet.

    https://joyfulputtering.blogspot.com/2018/11/ginkgo-day.html

    Like

  2. MaryAnn, thank you for your wonderfully robust response to this post, complete with link to your own experience with ginkgo trees. I first learned of the dramatic ginkgo-tree leaf-drop phenomenon a number of years ago when passing through Lewisburg, WV, where a huge ginkgo was planted in about 1905 and has been faithfully tended ever since. The 2-3 times we’ve passed through Lewisburg took place in October and never coincided with the big show. I had no idea other trees might do the same, and certainly had no idea that the next-door Japanese maple would ever dazzle me so thoroughly. If it has been doing a one-day drop every year, I’ve not once been aware of it over the past roughly 40 years! Now I’ll be watching annually!

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  3. oooooooooh I am smitted by your poetic description of the Japanese maple tree! Our little one (planted two years ago) just did the same quiet unveiling of her naked limbs. No hoopla, just a cascade of feathery reds.

    We’re adding color to all the walls inside our home this winter, and there will be one or two deep reds in there. Now I will think of your swatch when choosing the colors! Oooooooh la la! xoxo

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    1. How on earth did I live this long without knowing Japanese maples do mic-drops???! The combo of all-at-a-single-go and the complete lack of fanfare touched me to the core!

      Ooooooooh la la indeed re your plans to go deep red on some interior walls this winter. Do send pix!

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  4. Rich resplendent reds! So regal, plush.

    I thoroughly enjoyed “seeing” the maple through your eyes. One of my

    favorite trees.

    “only the
    barest sacred whisper of a landing
    on the ground of my being.

    Divine.

    Here, I noticed today that the birch in the front yard is “necked”, as my cousin used to say. All except for a bright yellow skirt. I’ll see in the morning if the skirt is gone too. LOL.

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    1. Sheila, I take pleasure in your picking up on the rich, resplendent, regal, and plush of my neighbor’s Japanese maple, and picking up on the divine in my witnessing the quiet unheralded leaf-drop going on just feet away from me. Thank you for your keen observations.

      And I love the reference to your cousin’s “neck-ed” pronunciation!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. That’s how you spell it! DUH, Sheila. LOL 🙂

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  5. Oh how I miss the drama of fall. In Vienna, the trees were all naked with some leaves hanging in there for dear life!

    Love the drama of the reds and how you captured the reds on your swatch.

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    1. Carol, you’ve got me curious: what are the particulars of the annual meteorological cycle where you reside in Israel? Your trip to Vienna would have been a very distinct change of scenery!

      Thanks for your feedback on the reds on my swatch. I love dialing in to the very bright luminosity of the Japanese maple and then capturing the much more muted subdued dogwood.

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      1. Here in Israel we have mainly two seasons. Summer about 7 months and winter 5 months. Our winters are mild compared to Europe and northern states of US. There may snow in Jerusalem and the Golan Heights and in the north. Temperatures are normally between 10 – 17° C can be higher and lower. Lots of rain in winter, last week, while I was in Vienna, there was lots of rain, but then sunny weather like today 21° around noon. Found this that shows temps in F. Israel Climate, Weather By Month, Average Temperature – Weather Spark https://share.google/y4FP6koEmjaluCAtI

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        1. Wow, a pronounced difference from New England, no two ways about that! Thanks for the on-the-ground report, Carol!

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In 2014, I grab an unexpected opportunity to paint.

To make art.

I get hooked.

In 2015 I start a blog—a diary of my life as an artist.

I post my paintings and their stories. The good, the bad, the ugly.

My compass points: bust through fear, be playful, get messy, trust my gut.

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