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Road and Hills

I shall go away

To the brown hills, the quiet ones,

The vast, the mountainous, the rolling,

Sun-fired and drowsy!

 

My horse snuffs delicately

At the strange wind;

He settles to a swinging trot; his hoofs ***** the dust.

The road winds, straightens,

Slashes a marsh,

Shoulders out a bridge,

Then --

Again the hills.

Unchanged, innumerable,

Bowing huge, round backs;

Holding secret, immense converse:

In gusty voices,

Fruitful, fecund, toiling

Like yoked black oxen.

 

The clouds pass like great, slow thoughts

And vanish

In the intense blue.

 

My horse lopes; the saddle creaks and sways.

A thousand glittering spears of sun slant from on high.

The immensity, the spaces,

Are like the spaces

Between star and star.

 

The hills sleep.

If I put my hand on one,

I would feel the vast heave of its breath.

I would start away before it awakened

And shook the world from its shoulders.

A cicada's cry deepens the hot silence.

The hills open

To show a slope of poppies,

Ardent, noble, heroic,

A flare, a great flame of orange;

Giving sleepy, brittle scent

That stings the lungs.

A creeping wind slips through them like a ferret; they bow and dance,

answering Beauty's voice . . .

 

The horse whinnies. I dismount

And tie him to the grey worn fence.

I set myself against the javelins of grass and sun;

And climb the rounded breast,

That flows like a sea-wave.

The summit crackles with heat, there is no shelter, no hollow from

the flagellating glare.

 

I lie down and look at the sky, shading my eyes.

My body becomes strange, the sun takes it and changes it, it does not feel,

it is like the body of another.

The air blazes. The air is diamond.

Small noises move among the grass . . .

 

Blackly,

A hawk mounts, mounts in the inane

Seeking the star-road,

Seeking the end . . .

But there is no end.

 

Here, in this light, there is no end. . .

s
Written by
Stephen Vincent Benet
1898-1943 / American
Lines·Words
58·333
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