601 |
End of a Landmark |
Power from a copper wire |
The Complete Poetry of James Hearst |
2001 |
destruction, disappointment |
|
|
|
602 |
A Small Victory |
Cold, the snow squeaked underfoot, |
The Complete Poetry of James Hearst |
2001 |
revenge, animals |
|
|
|
603 |
The Supermarket's Secret Machine |
Today my wife sent me to the |
The Complete Poetry of James Hearst |
2001 |
shopping, uncertainty |
|
|
|
604 |
Photograph |
A photograph taken from |
The Davidson Miscellany |
1982 |
appearances, smoking |
|
|
|
605 |
A Few Good Licks |
So you said I would be the |
The Davidson Miscellany |
1981 |
marriage, aging |
|
|
|
606 |
Alms to the Giver |
The mail this morning made me |
The Davidson Miscellany |
1982 |
greed, deception |
|
|
|
607 |
The Hard Sell |
The spangles in his talk glitter |
The Denver Post Roundup |
1971 |
deception, money |
|
|
|
608 |
Home Work |
Today is cleaning day in the pens |
The Ghent Quarterly |
1975 |
work, animals |
|
|
|
609 |
Surprise [1] |
You seemed brave but lost in the ambush of clover, |
The Humanist |
1957 |
love, betrayal |
|
Limited View 22, Landmark and Other Poems 23. |
|
610 |
Birth Pains |
I do not remember birth pains |
The New Renaissance |
1978 |
morning, birth |
|
|
|
611 |
Take This Guy |
Now take this guy next door, |
The New Renaissance |
1976 |
argument, jealousy |
|
|
|
612 |
Virtue of Logic |
He believed in the generation |
The New Renaissance |
1978 |
reason, argument |
|
|
|
613 |
The Insatiable Demand |
He chopped his work |
The New Renaissance |
1979 |
busyness, overwhelmed |
|
|
|
614 |
Time's Laggard |
The house of summer closed its doors. |
The Saturday Evening Post |
1960 |
winter, stubbornness |
|
|
|
615 |
Late Meadowlark |
We know the meaning when we read the signs |
The Saturday Evening Post |
1960 |
birds, fall |
|
Limited View 11, Snake in the Strawberries 34. |
|
616 |
Grandfather's Farm |
The worn scythe hangs in the box-elder tree, |
The Saturday Evening Post |
1959 |
work, family |
|
Limited View 33, Landmark and Other Poems 7. |
|
617 |
Cleaning the Barn |
We put it off, not having to prove |
The Small Farm |
1976 |
work, farming |
|
Landmark and Other Poems 40, Snake in the Strawberries 93. |
|
618 |
Day of the Cornfield |
The day of the cornfield all right, |
The Small Farm |
1976 |
farming, observation |
|
Snake in the Strawberries 59. |
|
619 |
Saturday Morning |
This morning wrapped in my indolence |
The Smith |
1968 |
birds, guilt |
|
|
|
620 |
Cerebral Palsy |
Each morning the wild, random |
The Windless Orchard |
1980 |
illness, perseverance |
|
|
|
621 |
A Winter Review |
The farm wraps itself for winter |
The Wormwood Review |
1972 |
winter, farming |
|
Shaken by Leaf-Fall 11. |
|
622 |
On Guard |
The sun protects my back |
Tinderbox |
1978 |
morning, fear |
|
|
|
623 |
The Strongest Magic |
Anger pens me in a sty |
Trace |
1968 |
anger, love |
|
|
|
624 |
The Backward Flow |
A man bent with the burden |
University of Windsor Review |
1979 |
aging, fall |
|
|
|
625 |
After Corn Husking |
The last load ends the day |
University Review |
1942 |
harvest, fall |
|
The Sun at Noon 36, Man and His Field 46. |
|