Drying Their Wings
Vachel Lindsay
(What the Carpenter Said) The moon’s a cottage with a door. Some folks can see it plain. Look, you may catch a glint of light, A sparkle through the pane, Showing the place is brighter still Within, though bright without. There, at a cosy open fire Strange babes are grouped about. The children of the wind and tide— The urchins of the sky, Drying their wings from storms and things So they again can fly.
Next 10 Poems
- Vachel Lindsay : Eden In Winter
- Vachel Lindsay : Edwin Booth
- Vachel Lindsay : Epilogue. Under The Blessing Of Your Psyche Wings
- Vachel Lindsay : Euclid
- Vachel Lindsay : Factory Windows Are Always Broken
- Vachel Lindsay : Foreign Missions In Battle Array
- Vachel Lindsay : Galahad, Knight Who Perished
- Vachel Lindsay : General William Booth Enters Into Heaven
- Vachel Lindsay : Genesis
- Vachel Lindsay : Ghosts In Love
Previous 10 Poems
- Vachel Lindsay : Darling Daughter Of Babylon
- Vachel Lindsay : Crickets On A Strike
- Vachel Lindsay : Caught In A Net
- Vachel Lindsay : By The Spring, At Sunset
- Vachel Lindsay : Buddha
- Vachel Lindsay : Blanche Sweet
- Vachel Lindsay : Beyond The Moon
- Vachel Lindsay : At Mass
- Vachel Lindsay : An Indian Summer Day On The Prairie
- Vachel Lindsay : An Explanation Of The Grasshopper