1 min read
Слушать(AI)The Great Western Plains
The little voices of the prairie dogs Are tireless . . .
They will give three hurrahs Alike to stage, equestrian, and pullman,
And all unstingingly as to the moon.
And Fifi's bows and poodle ease Whirl by them centred on the lap Of Lottie Honeydew, movie queen,
Toward lawyers and Nevada.
And how much more they cannot see!
Alas, there is so little time,
The world moves by so fast these days!
Burrowing in silk is not their way — And yet they know the tomahawk.
Indeed, old memories come back to life;
Pathetic yelps have sometimes greeted Noses pressed against the glass.
Harold Hart Crane
Harold Hart Crane (July 21, 1899 – April 27, 1932) was an American poet. Provoked and inspired by T. S. Eliot, Crane wrote modernist poetry that
Comments
You need to be signed in to write comments
Other author posts
For The Marriage of Faustus and Helen
And so we may arrive by Talmud skill And profane Greek to raise the building up Of Helen's house against the Ismaelite, King of Thogarma, and his habergeons Brimstony, blue and fiery; and the force Of King A baddon, and the beast of Cit...
Passage
Where the cedar leaf divides the sky I heard the sea In sapphire arenas of the hills I was promised an improved infancy Sulking, sanctioning the sun, My memory I left in a ravine,- Casual louse that tissues the buck-wheat,
Voyages IV
Whose counted smile of hours and days, suppose I know as spectrum of the sea and pledge Vastly now parting gulf on gulf of wings Whose circles bridge, I know, (from palms to the severe Chilled albatross's white immutability) No stream of grea...
Southern Cross
I wanted you, nameless Woman of the South, No wraith, but utterly—as still more alone The Southern Cross takes night And lifts her girdles from her, one by one— High, cool, wide from the slowly smoldering fire Of lower heavens,— vaporous scar...