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21 April 2015

Spring-Sticky Greens - Missoula, Montana

My gardening-genius sister of the far northern city has been collecting aged horse manure after work - trowel scoop by trowel scoop, into large plastic bags carefully placed in her car trunk. (Yes, with patience being a virtue and all, she’s got a head start toward saintliness of some sort.) Last week, she texted something about metaphorical teaspoons and a photo of a sunset-silhouetted mountain of manure, with her comparatively teeny tiny car in the foreground. Her garden’s really going to be great this year.

Today she texted that our horse-whispering cousin’s new acreage has "singing frogs in the slough, ribbet ribbet",  (insert happy froggy emoticon) which made me think firstly, ’It’s such a Canadian thing to have fond thoughts of a slough.’ And nextly, ‘Surely, there exists a Canadian ode to spring-singing slough frogs?!’

Thoughts such as this are why Google is my Home screen.

I discovered that Lord de Tabley wrote, according to ‘The Living Age, Volume 270’, “…a charming set of interlinked sonnets to the frogs that sing unceasingly from early spring to harvest-time in every lake and pond and secret slough from end to end of Canada.“ Here’s my favourite find; may your very own memory spring to mind.

“Wrinkled oaks and plumy bracken,
Milkwort, skull-cap, sweet gale-bush,

Frog-pipe, more than you can reckon,
Cotton grass and flowering rush…”
- from ‘The Dirge of Day’, Lord de Tabley (1835-1895)

4 comments:

  1. :) Ah, yes!
    and thank-you again for finding more great poetry for us to enjoy! I remember asking my mother when I was very little, 'what is that sound, mama?' and she replied, those are the spring-peepers and when we hear them we know spring is here!'

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    Replies
    1. The Canadian farm-child's spring lullaby!
      What a very precious memory - I can envision your wee, cherubic face, framed by golden ringlets, perhaps.
      Thank you for sharing.

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  2. Memories of my Canadian childhood. Sloughs were fodder for inquiring young minds. Shall we Google for an ode to the never-ending-dusk.

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    Replies
    1. Ahhh, nothing quite like a Canadian prairie sunset, silhouetting the windbreak poplars. I like your phrasing: never-ending dusk.

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Your thoughts, please?