William Stafford Place Poems

  • 1.
    When we first moved here, pulled
    the trees in around us, curled
    our backs to the wind, no one
    had ever hit the moonâ??no one.
    ...
  • 2.
    The light along the hills in the morning
    comes down slowly, naming the trees
    white, then coasting the ground for stones to nominate.

    ...
  • 3.
    In line at lunch I cross my fork and spoon
    to ward off complicity--the ordered life
    our leaders have offered us. Thin as a knife,
    our chance to live depends on such a sign
    ...
  • 4.
    All the Sioux were defeated. Our clan
    got poor, but a few got richer.
    They fought two wars. I did not
    take part. No one remembers your vision
    ...
  • 5.
    I put my foot in cold water
    and hold it there: early mornings
    they had to wade through broken ice
    to find the traps in the deep channel
    ...
  • 6.
    The well rising without sound,
    the spring on a hillside,
    the plowshare brimming through deep ground
    everywhere in the fieldâ??
    ...
  • 7.
    Aristotle was a little man with
    eyes like a lizard, and he found a streak
    down the midst of things, a smooth place for his feet
    much more important than the carved handles
    ...
  • 8.
    In the late night listening from bed
    I have joined the ambulance or the patrol
    screaming toward some drama, the kind of end
    that Berky must have some day, if she isn't dead.
    ...
Total 8 Place Poems by William Stafford

Top 10 most used topics by William Stafford

World 10 Life 10 Away 9 Deep 9 People 8 Night 8 Place 8 Home 7 River 7 Long 7

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Poem of the day

Samuel Taylor Coleridge Poem
Dejection: An Ode
 by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Late, late yestreen I saw the new moon,
With the old moon in her arms;
And I fear, I fear, my master dear!
We shall have a deadly storm.
Ballad of Sir Patrick Spence.

I

...

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