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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
NEW ENGLAND LANDSCAPE, by DUBOSE HEYWARD Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: On a sepia ground Last Line: Is slowly unwinding its skein. Subject(s): Landscape; New England | |||
On a sepia ground Shot with orange light, The pines In blue-black lines; And birches, slender, Diagonal, and white, Stencil compact designs. The inevitable wall, As it leaves the woods, Breaks to a sprawl Of separate stones, Echoing the tones Of sepia and orange With high-lights Of chrome and red, Until they find a bed In the splotched lilac Of the meadow, Or chill to blue in shadow. In the valley's cupped palm Lies a handful of ripening grain. And, riding the high blue calm Over Monadnock, A decorous cloud Is slowly unwinding its skein. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NEW ENGLAND, AUTUMN by NORMAN DUBIE NEW ENGLAND, SPRINGTIME by NORMAN DUBIE POPHAM OF THE NEW SONG: 5; FOR R.P. BLACKMUR by NORMAN DUBIE ADDRESS TO THE SCHOLARS OF NEW ENGLAND by JOHN CROWE RANSOM NEW ENGLAND by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS NEW ENGLAND by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON SPRING IN NEW ENGLAND by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH RETREATS by CARRIE ADAMS BERRY ALTERNATIVES by DUBOSE HEYWARD |
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