Calendar coincidence--Peace and Autumnal Equinox.
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This is another
one of the calendar poems inspired
by random, or not so random, coincidences of dates, usually discovered as I am in a mad scramble for a blog entry topic. It first appeared in 2013 but the calendar
serendipity is annual.
Tomorrow will be the first day of Autumn but here in McHenry County we will be soaked by the remnants of Tropical Storm Imelda, the same monsoon that has drowned Houston in more than 40 inches of rain so conditions are not
just as they were described in the doggerel
below.
Today is the International Day of Peace, so proclaimed by the United Nations every year
since 1982. Since 2001 the date has been
fixed to September 21 instead of the original third Tuesday of the month, which
was also when the UN General Assembly begins
its annual session.
This year it is
also the day after the International
Climate Strike which was timed to both reflect the precarious balance which is now tipping us all to ecological destruction just as the Autumnal Equinox tips us irrevocably toward
winter and to get the attention of the United
Nations Emergency Climate Change Summit.
The rapid deterioration of the environment—melting ice caps, rising
seas, hurricanes, heat waves, fires, droughts, and famine—also displaces millions creating international
migration crisis, destabilizing governments,
and creating conflict over scarce and vanishing resources—the perfect recipe for war and more war.
Those conflicts
smolder across the globe and we are also now on the cusp of a possible war with
Iran carrying water for both the Saudis and Israel
Among its grander visions which must have seemed distant even to the founders of the Day of Peace, was at a call for an annual one day cease fire of on-going hostilities. I can recall no armies ever standing down,
but perhaps I missed something.
International
Day of Peace/Autumnal Equinox Eve
September 21,
2013
The immanent
equinox advertises itself
this morning with crack crisp air,
elderly maples beginning to rust at
the crown,
a touch of gold on borer doomed
ashes,
mums and marigolds,
hoodies up on dog walkers in shorts,
all under a prefect azure sky—
you know the one from
the Sunday song
reminding “skies
everywhere as blue as mine.”
The globe
teeters on the edge of equanimity,
ready to balance for an instant
between night and day,
seasons, yesterday and tomorrow,
a perilous, promising, moment.
The poor
creatures swarming over its surface,
fancying ourselves somehow its
masters,
alas, bereft of any balance….
From the Wishful
Thinking File,
institutional division—
Festooned with
doves and olive branches
brave words on blue banners,
a speech here, a lovely little vigil
there,
an earnest strumming of guitars,
litanies sung, mantras chanted,
kind hearts and gentle people…
The creatures go
about our brutal business,
blithely ignoring it all—
proclamation and equinox
alike.
—Patrick
Murfin
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