Poem Against the British


I

The wind through the box-elder trees
Is like rides at dusk on a white horse,
Wars for your country, and fighting the British.

II

I wonder if Washington listened to the trees.
All morning I have been sitting in grass,
Higher than my eyes, beneath trees,
And listening upward, to the wind in leaves.
Suddenly I realize there is one thing more:
There is also the wind through the high grass.

III

There are palaces, boats, silence among white buildings,
Iced drinks on marble tops among cool rooms;
It is also good to be poor, and listen to the wind.


作者
罗伯特·勃莱

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