With us in springtime, until dawn, In orchards blazing bonfires flame #NAME? When fertile rites received acclaim. The virgin soil is dried and baked, And steaming vapors from it swarm, And all the earth is fire-caked As are in winter stove-beds warm. When toiling and in earth engrossed, My shirt I strip and throw away, With scorching sun my back is glossed And baked like some big lump of clay. And standing where the heat's most hot, And with my eyes half in a daze, From head to foot, upon this spot, I'm covered with a coat of glaze. But when the night invades my room, And I peep through the windows dimmed, As jugs are filled, so with the bloom Of lilac, moisture, I am brimmed. It washes off the outer shell Of walls' cooled evening face, And offers it to any girl, Born here and native of this place. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...POOR DEVIL! by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET CLEAR AND COLDER; BOSTON COMMON by ROBERT FROST TO J. D. H. (KILLED AT SURREY C. H., OCTOBER, 1866) by SIDNEY LANIER HER EYES by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON OLD TRAILS by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON NURSING HOME: THE DOLL by KAREN SWENSON |