The red and green kingfishers flash between the orchids and clover, One bird casts its gleam on another. Green vines hang through the high forest, They weave a whole roof to the mountain, The lone man sits with shut speech, He purrs and pats the clear strings. He throws his heart up through the sky, He bites through the flower pistil and brings up a fine fountain. The red-pine-tree god looks at him and wonders. He rides through the purple smoke to visit the sennin, He takes "Floating Hill" by the sleeve, He claps his hand on the back of the great water sennin. But you, you dam'd crowd of gnats, Can you even tell the age of a turtle? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WEIGHING THE BABY by ETHEL LYNN BEERS THE BLACK RIDERS: 56 by STEPHEN CRANE DEAD COW FARM by ROBERT RANKE GRAVES THE WASTE PLACES by JAMES STEPHENS PIONEER WOMAN by EVA K. ANGLESBURG THE ART OF PRESERVING HEALTH: BOOK 2. DIET by JOHN ARMSTRONG |