THE twigs of the birch imprint the December sky Like branching veins upon a thin old hand; I think of summer-time, yes, of last July, When she was beneath them, greeting a gathered band Of the urban and bland. Iced airs wheeze through the skeletoned hedge from the north, With steady snores, and a numbing that threatens snow, And skaters pass; and merry boys go forth To look for slides. But well, well do I know Whither I would go! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: MINERVA JONES by EDGAR LEE MASTERS ALL FOOLS' CALENDER by DONALD (GRADY) DAVIDSON THEN AND NOW by CECIL DAY LEWIS VASHTI by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON THE FEAST OF LIGHTS by EMMA LAZARUS SURFACES AND MASKS; 6 by CLARENCE MAJOR DOMESDAY BOOK: ALMA BELL TO THE CORONER by EDGAR LEE MASTERS HOMAGE TO SEXTUS PROPERTIUS: 4. DIFFERENCE OF OPINION WITH LYGDAMUS by EZRA POUND |