This wood burns a dark
Incense. Pale moss drips
In elbow-scarves, beards
From the archaic
Bones of the great trees.
Blue mists move over
A lake thick with fish.
Snails scroll the border
Of the glazed water
With coils of ram's-horn.
Out in the open
Down there the late year
Hammers her rare and
Various metals.
Old pewter roots twist
Up from the jet-backed
Mirror of water
And while the air's clear
Hourglass sifts a
Drift of goldpieces
Bright waterlights are
Sliding their quoits one
After the other
Down boles of the fir.
Sylvia Plath
Image source.
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Dark Wood, Dark Water
Labels:
poem,
poetry,
sylvia plath
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2 comments:
I knew it was Sylvia at the first stanza.
:)
Yeah, there are few things darker that Sylvia......
Cheers!
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