Winter’s Silhouette

Konrad TittelDecember 29, 2024Music and ArtPoetry
Winter’s Silhouette

Artwork by Alfred Sisley, 1873

Inspired by the painting "Near Louveciennes" by Alfred Sisley, 1873

I feel Winter silently creeping in,
Hear Spring’s voice slowly fading away in
Each soft, helpless shriek of
Each fragile leaf below my feet,
Like a final, desperate breath,
A clarion call for life,
Escaping unanswered into the crisp air of dusk.
I cover my ears,
For I’ve heard enough of the knell
In my days,
And steer my gaze
Back home.

Its silhouette stands still,
Firm among the
Carelessly blissful pirouette
Of red, of orange, of blue,
Its worn planks like wrinkles
Eroded by the all-too-swift passage of time.
It no longer has energy
To dance.
There’s a bitter-sweetness in that image,
In that amalgam of
the sweet, the sour, the pungent memories,
And its
Too much for me to handle,
Right now.

So instead I
Navigate my head back on course,
Into the sweet Spring air,
Let my gaze wander past along the infinite meadows of
Of wheat,
Slouching under the weight of the night sky.

The casual observer
Might think me greedy,
With my gaze there
Devouring the thin wisps of
Dwindling sunlight,
Indulging on
The silent, secretive whispers of the wind,
Inhaling the fresh air
As if it were my last breath.
And it's true,
I am greedy.
Greedy for life,
For the vitality
That might escape me at any moment,
That left my home barren
That left my embrace barren.

I used to share this scent,
This view,
This silence.
This life.
But alas,
Winter is coming,
Again.

Konrad is a 17-year-old lover of all things science and art, finding solace in the tender intersection between these two schools of thought. He is an avid proponent of the importance of connection as a driver of social and emotional change, actively placing connecting with others at the forefront, both in his daily life and in his writing!