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Outsider

Text of Poem

The field stretches from morning
to evening, passes no verdict on
work done. The tractor shouts,
smoke pours from the exhaust, the plow
turns black ridges where I hold a
straight line until the fence turns me.
A spring sun warms the air, I see
a flock of ducks waver north,
a wild plum, gnarled and stunted,
along the fencerow bursts into bloom.
I should cut it down, I farm to grow
the seeds I plant, not those from
some wandering hand that sows
god knows what tares and thistles.
A rabbit hides in the grass, a cock
pheasant calls to his hen, tenants
of a wilderness I destroyed to cut
land into furrows for my own sake.
Like them, I am an alien here for
the sun, wind, sky, earth do not care
if I can shoulder my way into Canaan.

First Line
The field stretches from morning
Original Pub Location
Original Publication Date
1979
Original Citation
America (16 June 1979) 497.
Complete Poems
384
Word Count
142
Poetic Form
open
Observations
Interesting counterpoint to "Choosing"
Themes
Twitter Quote
a wild plum, gnarled and stunted, / along the fencerow bursts into bloom