The Face of Things

The creek retreats from flood rage
to its summer voice, trees
shake out leaves, turn the page
from dark and cold to seize
on green directions, how
blackbirds float from bough to bough.

Sap’s rise wakes an old tune.
Almost persuaded now I hear
rustle, whisper, sigh and soon
flowers burst from bud, queer
to return again to this new start
where violence detonates and bursts the heart.

Yet for the moment I stand caught
in the web spread by morning’s sun
where time hangs beckoning, I ought
dig deep, plant seed and feel begun
faith in my roots, that my sweat brings
truth again to the face of things.

    Original Citation

    Virginia Quarterly Review 46 (Autumn 1970) 595.

    Word Count
    110
    Original Publication
    Date Published
    1970
    Book Appearance
    Complete Poems
    227, 388
    Variant

    The first two stanzas of "The Face of Things" were reused in the poem "Sap's Rise."

    Theme(s)
    First Line
    The creek retreats from flood rage
    Poetic Form
    closed
    Observations

    The first two stanzas of "The Face of Things" were reused in the poem "Sap's Rise."