Rip
James Wright
It can't be the passing of time that casts That white shadow across the waters Just offshore. I shiver a little, with the evening. I turn down the steep path to find What's left of the river gold. I whistle a dog lazily, and lazily A bird whistles me. Close by a big river, I am alive in my own country, I am home again. Yes: I lived here, and here, and my name, That I carved young, with a girl's, is healed over, now, And lies sleeping beneath the inward sky Of a tree's skin, close to the quick. It's best to keep still. But: There goes that bird that whistled me down here To the river a moment ago. Who is he? A little white barn owl from Hudson's Bay, Flown out of his range here, and, if he wants to, He can be the body that casts That white shadow across the waters Just offshore.
Next 10 Poems
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- James Wright : To A Blossoming Pear Tree
- James Wright : To The Muse
- James Wright : Trying To Pray
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- Sir Thomas Wyatt : Alas Madam For Stealing Of A Kiss
- Sir Thomas Wyatt : And Wilt Thou Leave Me Thus?
Previous 10 Poems
- James Wright : Outside Fargo, North Dakota
- James Wright : On The Skeleton Of A Hound
- James Wright : Northern Pike
- James Wright : May Morning
- James Wright : Lying In A Hammock At William Duffy's Farm In Pine Island, Minnesota
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- James Wright : Hook
- James Wright : Having Lost My Sons, I Confront The Wreckage Of The Moon: Christmas, 1960
- James Wright : Goodbye To The Poetry Of Calcium
- James Wright : Fear Is What Quickens Me