Poetry Out Loud

The Net

Poet, novelist, editor, and critic Babette Deutsch was born and lived much of her life in New York City. Aligned with the Imagist movement, Deutsch . . . MORE »

By Babette Deutsch

Into this net of leaves, green as old glass   
That the sun fondles, trembling like images

In water, this live net, swung overhead
From branch to branch, what swam? The spider’s thread

Is less passive, where it appears to float
Like a bright hair clinging to the wind’s coat.

Hot at work, history neither schemes nor grieves   
Here where the soaking dead are last year’s leaves,

And over them slung, meshed with sun, a net   
No creature wove, none frantically tried to fret.

The huge weight of time without its sting   
Hangs in that greenly cradling woof. A wing

Has caught there, held. Held. But not to stay,   
We know, who, how slowly, walk away.


Babette Deutsch, “The Net” from The Collected Poems of Babette Deutsch (New York: Doubleday, 1969). Reprinted with the permission of Michael Yarmolinsky.