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By Lorine Niedecker

My mother saw the green tree toad
on the window sill
her first one
since she was young.
We saw it breathe


and swell up round.
My youth is no sure sign
I’ll find this kind of thing
tho it does sing.
Let’s take it in


I said so grandmother can see
but she could not
it changed to brown
and town
changed us, too.


Lorine Niedecker, “[My mother saw the green tree toad]” from Collected Works, edited by Jenny Penberthy, Copyright © 2002 Regents of the University of California. Published by University of California Press.

Source: Collected Works (University of California Press, 2002)

  • Living
  • Nature
  • Relationships

Poet Bio

Lorine Niedecker
Niedecker was born in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, and lived in this wilderness area for most of her life. She lived a quiet life far removed from the professional poetry world, where she wrote hundreds of poems remarkable for their loving observation of nature and delicate musicality. Ever increasing in popularity, her finely-honed verse speaks to readers in a delightful, distinctive voice. See More By This Poet

More By This Poet

[I married]

I married

in the world’s black night
for warmth
                  if not repose.
                  At the close—
someone.

I hid with him
from the long range guns.
                  We lay leg
                  in the cupboard, head
in closet.

A slit of light
at no bird dawn—
                  Untaught
                  I thought
he drank

too much.
I say
                  I married
                  and lived unburied.
I thought—

By Lorine Niedecker

  • Living

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