Ditch the ads, upload images and much more - upgrade today from 5.95/month!
Read Contests Groups Learn Forums Store Help
 

Children in a Field by Angela Shaw: American Life in Poetry #27

In this lovely poem by Angela Shaw, who lives in Pennsylvania, we hear a voice of wise counsel: Let the young go, let them do as they will, and admire their grace and beauty as they pass from us into the future.
Children in a Field

They don’t wade in so much as they are taken.
Deep in the day, in the deep of the field,
every current in the grasses whispers hurry
hurry, every yellow spreads its perfume
like a rumor, impelling them further on.
It is the way of girls. It is the sway
of their dresses in the summer trance-
light, their bare calves already far-gone
in green. What songs will they follow?
Whatever the wood warbles, whatever storm
or harm the border promises, whatever
calm. Let them go. Let them go traceless
through the high grass and into the willow-
blur, traceless across the lean blue glint
of the river, to the long dark bodies
of the conifers, and over the welcoming
threshold of nightfall.



American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Reprinted from Poetry,; September, 2004, Vol. 184, No. 5, by permission of the author. Poem copyright © 2004 by Angela Shaw. Introduction copyright © 2009 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. We do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.

Add a comment

    : Comment:

Comments


  • skgim2628
    July 3
    Edit | Reply

    so sweet....

    thanks for giving such a nice poem......

    poem is establishing some real facts..and i like the poets imagination....

    thank you sir,

  • Spoken Beautifully! Thank you!

    *Life*

    Mothers

    Listen to your children
    sever your tongues

    give homage to their thoughts
    not to interrupt

    let them think for themselves
    do not think for them

    for their minds
    are not yours

    let the great expanse swell with knowledge
    of their own

    let their hearts fill with laughter
    of their own

    let them gather the confidence
    they have found on their own

    Then you will know
    You have really given life

  • ellabella
    July 2
    Edit | Reply
    So true and difficult to do.

  • Fantastic!

    "What songs will they follow?" Prabably I don't need to know what songs they will follow. We have three daughters, four grandchildren, and two greatgrandchildren. I wonder what songs they will follow. For children do something nice and give a stone before advice. I have learned not to give advice even if asked for it. Because I have learned that what I say is not what they hear. Just to listen, nod my heard, and smoke my pipe is enough. They will work it out what ever way they will. Great Poem. I salute you!