Much of the poetry that has endured the longest is about the
relentless movement of time, and in ways all art is about just that. Here’s a
landscape in which time is at work, by Geraldine Connolly, who lives in Montana .
[Introduction by Ted Kooser.]
The eagle floats and glides,
circling the burnished aspen,
then takes the high pines
with a flash of underwing.
As surely as the eagle sails
toward the bay’s open curve,
as surely as he swoops and seizes
the struggling fish, pulling
it from an osprey’s beak;
so too, autumn descends,
to steal the glistening
summer from our open hands.