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 when two events fell on the same day. Today, like most years, the astronomical event falls a day ahead to a proclaimed one but the calendar serendipity is still close enough.
Tomorrow is the Autumnal Equinox and the first day of Fall in the Northern Hemisphere. Here in McHenry County, we are riding out a nearly ideal string of late Summer weather with brilliant blue skies and the landscape still verdant. As if on cue tomorrow the wind will swing around from the north and daytime temps will fall into the low 60s. Today is the Autumnal Equinox and the first day of Fall in the Northern Hemisphere. Here in McHenry County, we are riding out a nearly ideal string of late Summer weather with brilliant blue skies and the landscape still verdant. Tomorrow the wind will swing around from the north and daytime temps will fall into the low 60s.
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.
But peace is
hardly the order of the day.
The Russian War on Ukraine, the largest armed conflict in Europe
since World War II drags on. Although
Ukraine seems to have re-gained the initiative recapturing significant territory
from the invaders, the ultimate result remains in doubt, the
largest nuclear power plant in Europe is still in harm’s
way threating wide-spread catastrophe, and a desperate Vladimir
Putin could escalate the conflict and directly attack Ukraine’s NATO
allies. This week mass graves and
evidence of wide-spread war crimes and executions were
uncovered in areas recently liberated.
Meanwhile, China
has made threats against Taiwan and President Joe Biden has
said that he would commit U.S. troops and forces to the defense
of the island in event of aggression. Around the globe dozens of regional and
internal conflicts simmer, each threatening to escalate into
something bigger and deadlier.
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has
re-set the Doomsday Clock to just 100 minutes to midnight.
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.
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.
And here at home we seem teetering on the edge of
Civil War.
No wonder this old
piece is still relevant.
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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