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Robert Frost


                         Elinor and Robert/Lesley and Irma/Marjorie and Carol (1915)


Rose Pogonis

A saturated meadow, 
Sun-shaped and jewel-small, 
A circle scarcely wider 
Than the trees around were tall; 
Where winds were quite excluded, 
And the air was stifling sweet 
With the breath of many flowers, -- 
A temple of the heat. 

There we bowed us in the burning, 
As the sun's right worship is, 
To pick where none could miss them 
A thousand orchises; 

For though the grass was scattered, 
yet every second spear 
Seemed tipped with wings of color, 
That tinged the atmosphere. 

We raised a simple prayer 
Before we left the spot, 
That in the general mowing 
That place might be forgot; 
Or if not all so favored, 
Obtain such grace of hours, 
that none should mow the grass there 
While so confused with flowers.

John Ashbery

  The New Spirit (excerpt) I thought that if I could put it all down, that would be one way. And next the thought came to me that to leave a...