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This morning with a class of girls outdoors, I saw how frail poems are in a world burning up with flowers, in which, overhead, the great elms - green, and tall - stood carrying leaves in their arms.
The girls listened equally to my drone, reading, and to the bees' ricocheting among them for the blossom on the bone, or gazed off at a distant mower's astronomies of green and clover, flashing, threshing in the new, untarnished sunlight.
And all the while, dwindling, tinier, the voices - Yeats, Marvell, Donne - sank drowning in a spring still not written of, as only the sky clear above the brick bell-tower - blue, and white - was shifting toward the hour.
Calm, indifferent, cross-legged or on elbows half-lying on the grass - how should the great dead tell them of dying? They will come to time for poems at last, when they have found they are no more the beautiful and young all poems are for. |
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