I tear a fertile wrinkle in the field Of rotting stubble, with my keen plowshare, That flashes in the sun like polished shield; The while around me grows in April air The pungence of my team, of harness leather, Of acrid soil itself. Against the sky A wedge of northbound ducks predict soft weather (Mallard with head of green, the Golden Eye With snowy bonnet); and a laggard asks For time. The leader sends his wilding call Backward across the budding fields of earth To hearten him and me. I tear the masks Of winter from the land and dream of fall When all these teeming fields will come to birth. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A BOY'S MOTHER by JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY SONNET: 71 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE SONG TOURNAMENT: NEW STYLE by LOUIS UNTERMEYER DIRGE by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES THE FLOWERY ALCHEMIST by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES A YEOMAN by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN SONGS OF THE SEA CHILDREN: 113 by BLISS CARMAN |