Poetry Out Loud

Buried at Springs

POEM VIEWS: 6834
Print this Page


James Schuyler was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1923. He attended Bethany and the University of Florence. Schuyler is associated with the New

. . . MORE »

By James Schuyler

There is a hornet in the room
and one of us will have to go
out the window into the late
August midafternoon sun. I
won. There is a certain challenge
in being humane to hornets
but not much. A launch draws
two lines of wake behind it
on the bay like a delta
with a melted base. Sandy
billows, or so they look,
of feathery ripe heads of grass,
an acid-yellow kind of
goldenrod glowing or glowering
in shade. Rocks with rags
of shadow, washed dust clouts
that will never bleach.
It is not like this at all.
The rapid running of the
lapping water a hollow knock
of someone shipping oars:
it’s eleven years since
Frank sat at this desk and
saw and heard it all
the incessant water the
immutable crickets only
not the same: new needles
on the spruce, new seaweed
on the low-tide rocks
other grass and other water
even the great gold lichen
on a granite boulder
even the boulder quite
literally is not the same

      II
A day subtle and suppressed
in mounds of juniper enfolding
scratchy pockets of shadow
while bigness—rocks, trees, a stump—
stands shadowless in an overcast
of ripe grass. There is nothing
but shade, like the boggy depths
of a stand of spruce, its resonance
just the thin scream
of mosquitoes ascending.
Boats are light lumps on the bay
stretching past erased islands
to ocean and the terrible tumble
and London (“rain persisting”)
and Paris (“changing to rain”).
Delicate day, setting the bright
of a young spruce against the cold
of an old one hung with unripe cones
each exuding at its tip
gum, pungent, clear as a tear,
a day tarnished and fractured
as the quartz in the rocks
of a dulled and distant point,
a day like a gull passing
with a slow flapping of wings
in a kind of lope, without
breeze enough to shake loose
the last of the fireweed flowers,
a faintly clammy day, like wet silk
stained by one dead branch
the harsh russet of dried blood.



James Schuyler, “Buried at Springs” from Collected Poems. Copyright © 1993 by James Schuyler. Used by permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, LLC, www.fsgbooks.com. All rights reserved. Caution: Users are warned that this work is protected under copyright laws and downloading is strictly prohibited. The right to reproduce or transfer the work via any medium must be secured with Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC.


HOME

BLOG

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

POEMS
Browse Poems
Browse Poets
Pre-20th Century
25-Lines and Fewer
Keyword Search
Today's Poet
Audio Guide
Videos

TEACHERS GUIDE
Table of Contents
Writing Activities &
  Lesson Plans

Contest Promotion

FOR TEACHERS
State Contacts
Judges Guide
Teacher FAQ
NCTE Standards
Students with
  Disabilities

Competition Resources
Teacher Quotes
Teacher Feedback

FOR STUDENTS
Find a Poem
Evaluation Criteria
Student FAQ
Submit Comments

NEWS & EVENTS
National Finals
Press Releases
Events Calendar
Media Contacts
News Clips
Photo Gallery
Download Graphics

FOR STATE PARTNERS
Contacts
Program Resources
State Partner FAQ
Finals Planning
Download Graphics
SAA Forum

STATE CONTACTS