Poetry Sunday: Country Summer by Leonie Adams
I grew up in the country and the summer that Léonie Adams describes in this poem is very familiar to me, especially the description of stars on a summer night. They seem so close that one could reach out and touch them...
Country Summer
by Léonie AdamsNow the rich cherry, whose sleek wood,
And top with silver petals traced
Like a strict box its gems encased,
Has spilt from out that cunning lid,
All in an innocent green round,
Those melting rubies which it hid;
With moss ripe-strawberry-encrusted,
So birds get half, and minds lapse merry
To taste that deep-red, lark’s-bite berry,
And blackcap bloom is yellow-dusted.
The wren that thieved it in the eaves
A trailer of the rose could catch
To her poor droopy sloven thatch,
And side by side with the wren’s brood—
O lovely time of beggar’s luck—
Opens the quaint and hairy bud;
And full and golden is the yield
Of cows that never have to house,
But all night nibble under boughs,
Or cool their sides in the moist field.
Into the rooms flow meadow airs,
The warm farm baking smell’s blown round.
Inside and out, and sky and ground
Are much the same; the wishing star,
Hesperus, kind and early born,
Is risen only finger-far;
All stars stand close in summer air,
And tremble, and look mild as amber;
When wicks are lighted in the chamber,
They are like stars which settled there.
Now straightening from the flowery hay,
Down the still light the mowers look,
Or turn, because their dreaming shook,
And they waked half to other days,
When left alone in the yellow stubble
The rusty-coated mare would graze.
Yet thick the lazy dreams are born,
Another thought can come to mind,
But like the shivering of the wind,
Morning and evening in the corn.
Many evocative images here. Summer nights used to be so much simpler - like all of life.
ReplyDeleteIndeed.
Delete'Into the rooms flow meadow airs' - that line perfectly captures the scents of a flower-perfumed evening.
ReplyDeleteI couldn't agree more.
DeleteThe last two stanzas are my favorites. :D
ReplyDeleteThey are so lovely and evocative, aren't they?
DeleteBeautiful!
ReplyDeleteMakes me want to go to a farm and enjoy the summer there.
ReplyDeleteI did not grow up in the country, but I had two sets of grandparents who lived there. The country was a place where time slowed, where I could hear the birds and smell the pecan trees and feel the tall grass on the prairie...this poem brings all that back for me.
ReplyDelete