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Whenever leaves are burning And the blue and bitter smoke Steals up from gardens and roadsides On evenings in October, Something in me stirs And wants to go away. I may be setting the table, Or baking a little cake With edges brown and scalloped. I may be under the covers Of the tall four-poster bed When that scent lays hold on me. And I would be leaving the fireside, The willow plates on the dresser, The quilt with its crazy patches, For almost any road, Rain-black or brown and rutty; For almost any village, So long as it's not home. |