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Fog

Text of Poem

Waves of the sea’s ghost
lap at my farmyard,
my neighbor has vanished
in a mouth of cloud,
I hear his dog bark
from another country
and the town has been crowned
with its smudge of smoke.
This is a moment of exile
I cherish, I am no stranger
to my own world,

With my permission I feed the hungry
in my denial there are no poor.
I lean against the morning
and watch the cows cluster
like daisy petals around the tank,
the warning cry of a far train
tightens your hand in mine
as the wind from outer space
brings its gust of news.

First Line
Waves of the sea's ghost
Original Pub Location
Original Publication Date
1951
Original Citation
Man and His Field. Denver: Alan Swallow. 1951. 66.
Republication
Complete Poems
72
Hearst Collections
Word Count
106
Poetic Form
open
Bibliographic Notes

Publishing Error: pages 19-20 and 41-42 and incorrectly printed twice, back to back, between pages 30-31

Themes