In
Harvest
Mown
meadows skirt the standing wheat;
I
linger, for the hay is sweet,
New-cut
and curing in the sun.
Like
furrows, straight, the windrows run,
Fallen,
gallant ranks that tossed and bent
When,
yesterday, the west wind went
A-rioting
through grass and grain.
To-day
no least breath stirs the plain;
Only
the hot air, quivering, yields
Illusive
motion to the fields
Where
not the slenderest tassel swings.
Across
the wheat flash sky-blue wings;
A
goldfinch dangles from a tall,
Full-flowered
yellow mullein; all
The
world seems turning blue and gold.
Unstartled,
since, even from of old,
Beauty
has brought keen sense of her,
I
feel the withering grasses stir;
Along
the edges of the wheat,
I
hear the rustle of her feet:
And
yet I know the whole sea lies,
And
half the earth, between our eyes.
SophIe
Jewett
1861-1909
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