I was a wild thing and free and I walked the wet woods with their black bark gleaming and the gold silver haze of oak leaves springing – five miles upon a holiday to see Aunt Tessie with my friends … or crept downstream around the bend where grassy banks give way to oozy bog with tufts of green and when together and unseen he gently gave a kiss to me I was wild then and free Later on a clear crisp morning when my boys would make their schemes and I’d step out to catch them my aims dissolved to dreams to see that axe cleft in the log the way my father left it there – the boys would come then and I’d threaten or in a pout, I’d go tell Tom, forgetting to feel, or let them see I too was wild and free ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * When all had gone then I was knitting watching winter fade stitching distance to each son and my farthest, dearest one sometimes the cat would scratch the door and lead me, walking on before to lace-branched lanes of elms on fire – on such an evening of desire I still was free ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * I ride now in my blanket this grandchild echo guides me down the gray and twilight road which cuts the fields the houses build on I draw the cover close as jolting shakes my bones and feel the chill Earth’s other blanket brings soon to comfort me ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * This land is settled there can be no yearning for far-off, tree-soft hills only turning of the restless spirit: freed forever: Spirit, speak of me tell them I am Free (a “posy” for Myrtle G., 1970s) |
Poems by Janet
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von Gumppenberg | Earth's Creatures |
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