In the flashes and black shadows of July the days, locked in each other's arms, seem still so that squirrels and colored birds go about at ease over the branches and through the air. Where will a shoulder split or a forehead open and victory be? Nowhere. Both sides grow older. And you may be sure not one leaf will lift itself from the ground and become fast to a twig again. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: WILLIAM AND EMILY by EDGAR LEE MASTERS THE YANKEE'S RETURN FROM CAMP [JUNE, 1775] by EDWARD BANGS A PENNY'S WORTH OF POESY by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS A NYMPH TO A YOUNG SHEPHERD, INSENSIBLE OF LOVE by PHILIP AYRES A SPIRITUAL LEGEND by PHILIP JAMES BAILEY |