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In Bertrams Garden

Jane looks down at her organdy

As if it somehow were the thing disgraced,

For being there, on the floor, in the dirt,

And she catches it up about her waist,

Smooths it out along one hip,

And pulls it over the crumpled slip.

On the porch, green-shuttered, cool,

Asleep is Bertram that bronze boy,

Who, having wound her around a spool,

Sends her spinning like a

Out to the garden, all alone,

To sit and weep on a bench of stone.

Soon the purple dark must

Lily and bleeding-heart and rose,

And the little cupid

Eyes and ears and chin and nose,

And Jane lie down with others soon,

Naked to the naked moon.

(August 12, 1925 – August 6, 2004) was an American teacher of writing and poet who won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1980. In summing up Just
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