#Americans #Modernism #XXCentury
O’eh’lee! La’la! Donna! Donna! Blue is the sky of Palermo; Blue is the little bay; And dost thou remember the orange…
You say love is this, love is that… Poplar tassels, willow tendrils the wind and the rain comb, tinkle and drip, tinkle and drip— branches drifting apart. Hagh!
A middle-northern March, now as a… gusts from the South broken agains… but from under, as if a slow hand… it moves—not into April—into a sec… the old skin of wind-clear scales…
They tell me on the morrow I must… This winter eyrie for a southern f… And truth to tell I tremble with… At thought of such unheralded repr… E’er have I known December in a w…
And yet one arrives somehow, finds himself loosening the hooks… her dress in a strange bedroom— feels the autumn
At ten AM the young housewife moves about in negligee behind the wooden walls of her husband’s… I pass solitary in my car. Then again she comes to the curb
There were some dirty plates and a glass of milk beside her on a small table near the rank, disheveled bed— Wrinkled and nearly blind
a burst of iris so that come down for breakfast we searched through the rooms for
Warm sun, quiet air an old man sits in the doorway of a broken house— boards for windows
Vast and grey, the sky is a simulacrum to all but him whose days are vast and grey and— In the tall, dried grasses
I bought a dish mop— having no daughter— for they had twisted fine ribbons of shining copper about white twine
I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which
Beloved you are Caviar of Caviar Of all I love you best O my Japanese bird nest No herring from Norway
The pure products of America go crazy— mountain folk from Kentucky or the ribbed north end of Jersey
The half-stripped trees struck by a wind together, bending all, the leaves flutter drily and refuse to let go