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Dave Robinson The New Old New England Halloween Blues

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The New Old New England Halloween Blues

dave robinson

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Their quiet root hairs floss the rocky soil, these paper birches slouching in brownfield sun. Industrial dyes reduce to dregs of lead and mercury to be swept up to sway in pent-up buds. An unofficial flag of urban areas—the shredded, snagged plastic bag—crackles low in the yellow shade. In the highest limbs, jostling bright like quicksilver, a half-deflated balloon bouquet. In the lowest drains, nestled like deaf and dumb kits, used needles hole up till the first false thaw. Young drunks smeared pumpkins across the cobbles last night and the whole scene has the look of a rubbish orchard. But there are no hayrides, corn mazes or “PickYour-Own . . .” enticements in sight. I point my car

north to the Green Mountains. Gold and red, orange and bronze are smashed brown paste on the road’s slim shoulder. Two strange, too-tropical patterns tore peak foliage to wet shreds in mid-month rainstorms.

October yields a bumper crop where roadkill’s strewn among streaks—steel-belteds melted down to veer off then burn the median’s rocksalt weeds. (Roadkill and baseball have long been our two true National Pastimes.) The scorched and dead are swept up to sway our minds toward rush hours and commutes as safe austerities of daily life.

Vermont’s highways are edged with blood-stained sands, alluvial plastics and autumn’s last wild blooms— catching me off-guard!

But traffic coagulates to parade pace, and scattered blue flowers are just bunched-up latex gloves—stained brown and dropped in wilting goldenrod by EMT’s. Pine trunks, guardrails or blasted granite cliffs welcome the unwitting multitudes in huddled masses of metal, bone, glass, leather and flesh.

Yet we smug Yankees wear the guise of the herd: the mask of the “Oblivious Rubbernecks.”

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