#Americans #Modernism
The rose is obsolete but each petal ends in an edge, the double facet cementing the grooved columns of air—The edge
A big young bareheaded woman in an apron Her hair slicked back standing on the street One stockinged foot toeing
Of asphodel, that greeny flower, like a buttercup upon its branching stem— save that it’s green and wooden— I come, my sweet,
By the road to the contagious hosp… under the surge of the blue mottled clouds driven from the northeast—a cold wind. Beyond, th… waste of broad, muddy fields
Sooner or later we must come to the end of striving to re-establish the image the image of
Your thighs are appletrees whose blossoms touch the sky. Which sky? The sky where Watteau hung a lady’s slipper. Your knees
From the Nativity which I have already celebrated the Babe in its Mother’s arms the Wise Men in their stolen splendor
It is still warm enough to slip from the weeds into the lake’s edge, your clothes blushing in the grass and three small boys grinning behind the derelict hearth’s side. But summer...
I must tell you this young tree whose round and firm trunk between the wet pavement and the gutter
You sullen pig of a man you force me into the mud with your stinking ash-cart! Brother! —if we were rich
As the cat climbed over the top of the jamcloset first the right
I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which
Yellow, yellow, yellow, yellow! It is not a color. It is summer! It is the wind on a willow, the lap of waves, the shadow
When I am alone I am happy. The air is cool. The sky is flecked and splashed and wound with color. The crimson phalloi of the sassafras leaves
munching a plum on the street a paper bag of them in her hand They taste good to her They taste good