Drifting into time passages,
Years go falling in the fading
light —Time passages,
Buy me a ticket on the last train home tonight.
Well I'm not the kind to live in the past;
The years run too short and the days too fast;
The things you lean on are the things that don't last.
Well, it's just now and then my line gets cast into these
Time passages,
There's something back here that you left behind.
Oh, time passages—
Buy me a ticket on the last train home tonight.
—Al Stewart
Be careful. . . There is a metaphor coming.
Seven or eight years ago, I planted a small rhododendron bush next to the steps of our Vermont townhouse to give the place some extra color. I am no gardener, so I stopped at one bush. Still, despite getting plenty of water from rains, run off from the roof, and melting snow, the bush stayed tiny for the first two years. Then the grower who sold me the bush suggested that I also begin feeding it twice a year. Duh! She sold me the right fertilizer, and I measured it out carefully in both the spring and fall and added water as directed. The plant began to grow. Still, my timing was never right to see the plant in bloom. I would see buds in late spring, but we seemed never to be around when the buds opened.
Drifting into time passages. . .
Time passages. . . Well, it's just
now and then my line gets cast into these Time passages
More than six months have passed since I last wrote an entry in this
blog. I’ve been busy—writing new books, a grant, loads of multiple-choice and
short answer questions, and more. I haven’t been lazy; just a little
distracted.
And I spent time in Savannah—quality time with my mother, and final time
with my mother. That is hard to comprehend fully. But there’s a funny
last-visit story that keeps me smiling.
There's something back here that
you left behind. Oh, time passages—
Time runs toward us and away from us. And each year, the rhododendron
blooms, whether we are there to see it or not. This year, we got lucky.
Drifting into time passages. . .
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