The poem opens with a serene scene of riding horseback on a Sunday morning after the harvest, a time for leisure and reflection. The tasting of persimmon and wild grape, with their "sharp sweet of summer's end," evokes the sensory pleasures of the season and the bittersweet awareness of time passing. This moment of savoring the fruits of the land serves as a gateway to deeper reflections on history, memory, and the cycle of life. Berry's mention of naming those "who went west from here, names that rest on graves" introduces a contemplative layer to the poem, linking the present experience of the land with the memories of those who have lived and died before. This act of | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE HEMP (A VIRGINIA LEGEND) by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET CONTRA MORTEM: THE ECSTASY by HAYDEN CARRUTH CONTRA MORTEM: THE WHEEL OF BEING II by HAYDEN CARRUTH POSSUM SONG (A WARNING) by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON THE CHANT OF THE VULTURES by EDWIN MARKHAM |