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The
wind that makes music in November corn is in a hurry. The stalks hum,
the loose husks whisk skyward in half-playful swirls, and the wind
hurries on.
In
the marsh, long windy waves surge across the grassy sloughs, beat
against the far willows. A tree tries to argue, bare limbs waving, but
there is no detaining the wind.
On
the sandbar there is only wind, and the river sliding seaward. Every
wisp of grass is drawing circles on the sand. I wander over the bar to
a driftwood log, where I sit and listen to the universal roar, and to
the tinkle of wavelets on the shore. The river is lifeless: not a duck,
heron, marshhawk, or gull but has sought refuge from the wind. Out
of the clouds I hear a faint bark, as of a far-away dog. It is strange
how the world cocks its ears at that sound, wondering. Soon it is
louder: the honk of geese, invisible, but coming on.
The
flock emerges from the low clouds, a tattered banner of birds, dipping
and rising, blown up and blown down, blown together and blown apart,
but advancing, the wind wrestling lovingly with each winnowing wing.
When the flock is a blur in the far sky I hear the last honk, sounding
taps for summer.
It is warm behind the driftwood now, for the wind has gone with the geese. So would I - if I were the wind.
These excerpts are from “A Sand County Almanac, with essays on conservation from Round River”,
by Aldo Leopold and published by Oxford University Press (1966).
For more information about Aldo Leopold, see: http://www.aldoleopold.org
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