Once their fruit is picked,
The cornstalks lighten, and though
Keeping to their strict
Rows, begin to be
The tall grasses that they are—
Lissom, now, and free
As canes that clatter
In island wind, or plumed reeds
Rocked by lake water.
Soon, if not cut down,
Their ranks grow whistling-dry, and
Blanch to lightest brown,
So that, one day, all
Their ribbonlike, down-arcing
Leaves rise up and fall
In tossed companies,
Like goose wings beating southward
Over the changed trees.
Later, there are days
Full of bare expectancy,
Downcast hues, and haze,
Days of an utter
Calm, in which one white corn-leaf,
Oddly aflutter
Its fabric sheathing
A gaunt stem, can seem to be
The sole thing breathing.
The cornstalks lighten, and though
Keeping to their strict
Rows, begin to be
The tall grasses that they are—
Lissom, now, and free
As canes that clatter
In island wind, or plumed reeds
Rocked by lake water.
Soon, if not cut down,
Their ranks grow whistling-dry, and
Blanch to lightest brown,
So that, one day, all
Their ribbonlike, down-arcing
Leaves rise up and fall
In tossed companies,
Like goose wings beating southward
Over the changed trees.
Later, there are days
Full of bare expectancy,
Downcast hues, and haze,
Days of an utter
Calm, in which one white corn-leaf,
Oddly aflutter
Its fabric sheathing
A gaunt stem, can seem to be
The sole thing breathing.
( Richard Wilbur )
www.ChordsAZ.com