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Forsythia Fading

—after E.E. Cummings and A.E. Housman

Green leaves push yellow blooms away.
Bold colors leave, their lives an hour
Compared with green things’ lengthened day.
It’s true that nothing gold can stay.

Late April, maybe early May,
Pink blossoms drop, no more to flower,
Upon the lawn. They soon decay,
Food for the grass, which won’t display

Such vivid petals very long.
Abruptly, any sudden breeze
May blow them from their branches, flung
Away, to perish still so young.

Where but a few last blooms have clung—
Before our eyes can fully seize
The season’s palette—summer’s sprung
Where greenery intrudes among

The lacy white of Eastertide:
The cherry—queen of all the trees—
Has lost her garland; springtime’s bride
Fades fleetingly, until she’s dyed

Dark green. Bright hues no more provide
Their transitory ecstasies
Where long-lived foliage has denied
Them space to stay. Unsatisfied,

They yield, quickly diminishing,
Their brilliance changed for monochrome
Green leaves. Too quickly finishing
Their vibrant revels, vanishing

Deep into May showers’ softened loam,
Loose petals sink, buried, their brief
Lives cut short. Their yearly doom
Is to be hidden in earth’s gloom

Beneath the trees whose leaves invade.
Robbed once again by youth’s cruel thief,
Their beauty now no more displayed
As brighter colors quickly fade,

They fertilize old soil, unseen,
Where spring’s brief gold subsides to grief
Below the grass forever green.

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Cynthia Erlandson is a poet and fitness professional living in Michigan.  Her third collection of poems, Foundations of the Cross and Other Bible Stories, was released in July, 2024 by Wipf and Stock Publishers.  Her other collections are These Holy Mysteries and Notes on Time.  Her poems have also appeared in First Things, Modern Age, The North American Anglican, The Orchards Poetry Review, The Book of Common Praise hymnal, The Catholic Poetry Room, and elsewhere.


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5 Responses

  1. Roy Eugene Peterson

    Cynthia, this is a beautiful poem with vivid imagery and soulful meaning reminding us that life is fleeting. The colors of flower petals fading off into the green lawns of summer does remind us “that nothing gold can stay.” Change in life is inevitable as once bright and beckoning bodies eventually decay. The rhyme and flow is very well done and enhances the aura of the poem.

    Reply
  2. Paul A. Freeman

    The cherry tree references took me back to our back garden, the beauty of the blossom on the tree and the annoyance of the fallen blossom.

    I think I’ll make ‘nothing gold can stay’ my motto!

    Thanks for the read.

    Reply
  3. Cynthia Erlandson

    Thank you, Paul. I’m glad this brought back pleasant memories for you.

    Reply
  4. Alan Steinle

    I’m not sure which poems by E.E. Cummings and A.E. Housman this poem alludes to, but maybe someone will do more sleuthing than I have done and point them out.

    I counted six mentions of “green” in your poem. The color green is widely present in nature, and if it wasn’t my favorite color, I might get tired of it. All the other colors, however, might be more valued because of their rarity and ephemerality. While grass might not stay green forever in winters in zones close to the poles, it definitely has a way of surviving. I once wrote a sonnet about grass called “Indomitable.”

    You used an unusual and difficult rhyme scheme, but you’ve done it justice.

    Reply

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