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Sparrows in Spring

Text of Poem

The water falls drip . . . drip . . . drap
into a tin pail at the corner of the house
and the sparrows wink and teeter along the eaves
intoxicated with their own gossip.
They let fall
now a feather, now a ball of dung,
in their excitement.
They too are aware of the season,
they too dig in the ground, distribute fertilizer
and harvest seeds.
Now they ply the planting trade among themselves
while I select my corn for seed—
let us have no nonsense, they seem to say,
but be about our business
as briskly as possible.

First Line
The water falls drip.. drip.. drap
Original Pub Location
Original Publication Date
1937
Original Citation
Country Men (1937) xiii.
Complete Poems
29
Hearst Collections
Word Count
101
Poetic Form
open
Bibliographic Notes

Ward lists as "Sparrows in the Spring"

Themes
Twitter Quote
Now they ply the planting trade among themselves / while I select my corn for seed