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This post and all other posts on our website are snippets from Firth's writings on Substack.

Crinkle & Crackle

Even our great Mother’s organs of sense and love now pulse ultimately through the closing arteries of her upcoming slumbers and her veins open wide to welcome the weary, winter travelers. 

Under the crinkle and crackle of the mid mountain frost, summer’s tepid and tired ghost billowed steadily across the landscape. Its flume flew from all flues and its ether was equality—smoke, the great leveler, the great spirit that heats thrice.

Autumn is the time when life turns inward to wander in memory and to drift toward decay. Not death but a general desist occupies the land with business as it busily attends to nothing at all but the memory of a well-lived life and the anticipation of a well-lived death.

The northern wind rustled the leaves loose from their summer’s hold and acorns and walnuts plunked and splat upon the now flaxen-haired and brittle landscape. Supple and svelte once grew her general verve but her verte vim left with the late autumn frost. The acorns and their hulled cousins crinkled and crackled against the rigid but now yellow-orange gilded, leafed landscape, like thoughts over water or memories over the dark corners of our lives. Some will become trees themselves and some will become a maggot and worm-infused, ink black memory to support the ones that made it—the ones that will emerge next spring, if she ever does come.

Even our great Mother’s organs of sense and love now pulse ultimately through the closing arteries of her upcoming slumbers and her veins open wide to welcome the weary, winter travelers. Ebullient flowers become golden crypts and their hollowed trunks become hallowed homes for next year’s pollinators—new life is coming, but not yet. The hearth’s smoke, the summer’s ghost, descends to sing up the morning when the air around her warms with the sun and she descends to replicate herself infinitely against autumn’s great glistening and crystalline meadows. Like tangent shards of shattered glass, the melting, smoke-heaved frost alights autumn’s great moment with a flash of the fire’s breath and life turns back to look at itself, in memory—also like glass.

Life may grow unevenly and she often seems to favor the few. Some trees grow tall and some flowers grow not at all. Some, small acorns become some great trees and some, small acorns become the duft’s debris. But the autumn’s ether is equality and her general desist occupies her polity.

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