Blank Verse Samples
Fragments
________________________________
from "Birches"
When I see birches bend to left
and right
Across the lines of straighter
darker trees,
I like to think some boy's been
swinging them.
But swinging doesn't bend them
down to stay
As ice-storms do. Often you
must have seen them
Loaded with ice a sunny winter
morning
After a rain. They click
upon themselves
As the breeze rises, and turn many-colored
As the stir cracks and crazes their
enamel.
Soon the sun's warmth makes them
shed crystal shells
Shattering and avalanching on the
snow-crust--
Such heaps of broken glass to sweep
away
You'd think the inner dome of heaven
had fallen.
--Robert Frost
from MacBeth
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow
Creeps in this petty pace from
day to day
To the last syllable of recorded
time,
and all our yesterdays have lighted
fools
the way to dusty death. Out,
out brief candle!
Life's but a walking shadow, a
poor player
That struts and frets his hour
upon the stage
And then is heard no more.
It is a tale
told by an idiot, full of sound
and fury,
Signifying nothing.
--Shakespeare
from "The Lady in Kicking Horse River"
Not my hands but green across you
now.
Green tons hold you down, and ten
bass curve
teasing in your hair. Summer
slime
will pile deep on your breast.
Four months of ice
will keep you firm. I hope
each spring
to find you tangled in those pads
pulled not quite lose by the spillway
pour,
stars in dead reflection off your
teeth.
--Richard Hugo
Complete Poems
_________________________________
On the Skeleton of a Hound
Nightfall, that saw the morning-glories float
Tendril and string against the crumbling wall,
Nurses him now, his skeleton for grief,
His locks for comfort curled among the leaf.
Shuttles of moonlight weave his shadow tall,
Milkweed and dew flow upward to his throat.
Now catbird feathers plume the apple mound,
And starlings drowse to winter up the ground.
Thickened away from speech by fear, I move
Around the body. Over his forepaws, steep
Declivities darken down the moonlight now,
And the long throat that bayed a year ago
Declines from summer. Flies would love to leap
Between his eyes and hum away the space
Between the ears, the hollow where a hare
Could hide; another jealous dog would tumble
The bones apart, angry, the shining crumble
Of a great body gleaming in the air;
Quivering pigeons foul his broken face.
I can imagine men who search the earth
For handy resurrections, overturn
The body of a beetle in its grave;
Whispering men digging for gods might delve
A pocket for these bones, then slowly burn
Twigs in the leaves, pray for another birth.
But I will turn my face away from this
Ruin of summer, collapse of fur and bone.
For once a white hare huddled up the grass,
The sparrows flocked away to see the race.
I stood on darkness, clinging to a stone,
I saw the two leaping alive on ice,
On earth, on leaf, humus and withered vine:
The rabbit splendid in a shroud of shade,
The dog carved on the sunlight, on the air,
Fierce and magnificent his rippled hair,
The cockleburs shaking around his head.
Then, suddenly, the hare leaped beyond pain
Out of the open meadow, and the hound
Followed the voiceless dancer to the moon,
To dark, to death, to other meadows where
Singing young women dance around a fire,
Where love reveres the living.
I alone
Scatter this hulk about the dampened ground;
And while the moon rises beyond me, throw
The ribs and spine out of their perfect shape.
For a last charm to the dead, I lift the skull
And toss it over the maples like a ball.
Strewn to the woods, now may that spirit sleep
That flamed over the ground a year ago.
I know the mole will heave a shinbone over,
The earthworm snuggle for a nap on paws,
The honest bees build honey in the head;
The earth knows how to handle the great dead
Who lived the body out, and broke its laws,
Knocked down a fence, tore up a field of clover.
—James Wright