dots-menu
×

Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Jean Starr Untermeyer

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

A Man

Jean Starr Untermeyer

OFTEN, when I would sit, a dreamy, straight-haired child,

A book held gaping on my knee,

Watering a sterile romance with my thoughts,

You would come bounding to the curb

And startle me to life.

You sat so straight upon your vibrant horse—

That lovely horse, all silken fire and angry grace—

And yet you seemed so merged in him,

So like! At least my thoughts

Gave you a measure of that wildness.

And oh, for many years you seemed to me

Something to marvel at and yet to fear.

But now I know that you resemble most

That growth in nature that you most revere.

You are so like, so very like, a tree—

Grown straight and strong and beautiful,

With many leaves.

The years but add in richness to your boughs,

You make a noble pattern on the sky.

About your rugged trunk

Vines creep and lichens cling,

And children play at tag.

Upon your branches some will hang their load

And rest and cool while you must brave the sun.

But you put forth new life with every year,

And tower nearer to the clouds

And never bend or grow awry.

I wonder what sweet water bathes your roots,

And if you gain your substance from the earth;

Or if you have a treaty with the sun,

Or keep some ancient promise with the heavens.