Fear Is What Quickens Me
James Wright
1 Many animals that our fathers killed in America Had quick eyes. They stared about wildly, When the moon went dark. The new moon falls into the freight yards Of cities in the south, But the loss of the moon to the dark hands of Chicago Does not matter to the deer In this northern field. 2 What is that tall woman doing There, in the trees? I can hear rabbits and mourning dovees whispering together In the dark grass, there Under the trees. 3 I look about wildly.
Next 10 Poems
- James Wright : Goodbye To The Poetry Of Calcium
- James Wright : Having Lost My Sons, I Confront The Wreckage Of The Moon: Christmas, 1960
- James Wright : Hook
- James Wright : In Response To A Rumor That The Oldest Whorehouse In Wheeling, West Virginia, Has Been Condemned
- James Wright : Lying In A Hammock At William Duffy's Farm In Pine Island, Minnesota
- James Wright : May Morning
- James Wright : Northern Pike
- James Wright : On The Skeleton Of A Hound
- James Wright : Outside Fargo, North Dakota
- James Wright : Rip
Previous 10 Poems
- James Wright : Depressed By A Book Of Bad Poetry, I Walk Toward An Unused Pasture And Invite The Insects To Join Me
- James Wright : Beginning
- James Wright : Autumn Begins In Martins Ferry, Ohio
- James Wright : At The Executed Murderer's Grave
- James Wright : As I Step Over A Puddle At The End Of Winter, I Think Of An Ancient Chinese Governor
- James Wright : A Winter Daybreak Above Vence
- James Wright : A Poem About George Doty In The Death House
- James Wright : A Note Left In Jimmy Leonard's Shack
- James Wright : A Blessing
- William Wordsworth : Yarrow Visited. September, 1814