Poetry Founded in 1912 by Harriet Monroe
Home
Magazine
Web Exclusive
Letters
Books
About

May 2001
Table of Contents >>
This issue is sold out.
Subscribe >>
Pegasus


Featured Poem
Rule


Mary Makofske attended Douglass College and the University of Minnesota, where she earned an M.A. in English. Her two books are The Disappearance of Gargoyles (Thorntree Press, 1988) and Eating Nasturtiums (Flume, 1998). She has won several awards, including the Robert Penn Warren Prize from the Cumberland Review.

Email a friend >>
Printable version >>
Planting the Meadow
by Mary Makofske

I leave the formal garden of schedules
where hours hedge me, clip the errant sprigs
of thought, and day after day, a boxwood
topiary hunt chases a green fox
never caught. No voice calls me to order
as I enter a dream of meadow, kneel
to earth and, moving east to west, second
the motion only of the sun. I plant
frail seedlings in the unplowed field, trusting
the wildness hidden in their hearts. Spring light
sprawls across false indigo and hyssop,
daisies, flax. Clouds form, dissolve, withhold
or promise rain. In time, outside of time,
the unkempt afternoons fill up with flowers.

 
Current Issue
Past Issues
Historical Index
Past Issues

 SEARCH
 
 

 Copyright © The Poetry Foundation    Privacy Policy/Terms of Use    Contact