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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
ALIEN, by ADA HASTINGS HEDGES Poem Explanation First Line: This reach of sagebrush with its windy hill Last Line: Taking its flight among the listening stars. | |||
This reach of sagebrush with its windy hill Framed by my doorway, is a troubled place Known only to my dreams, remembered still In daylight hours to haunt them for a space. It seems that I shall presently awake In some azalea-scented dark once more, Where swans are drifting down a quiet lake, Curving their silver arc along the shore. And faintly now I almost thought I heard -- As one would hear across the verge of sleep -- Out of the grey wind's sudden lull, in bars Of gold, the slender rapture of a bird -- A rift of joy that no wild throat could keep, Taking its flight among the listening stars. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO DIANEME (1) by ROBERT HERRICK RAIN IN SUMMER by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE EARTH AND MAN by STOPFORD AUGUSTUS BROOKE I HAVE COME REMEMBERING by LORENE BYRNES BURNS TO MISS LOGAN, WITH BEATTIE'S POEMS by ROBERT BURNS WIND OF THE SOUTH by JENNIE MCBRIDE BUTLER ON READING A FRAGMENT CALLED THE FLOWER OF THE FOREST by LUCRETIA MARIA DAVIDSON |
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