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The Road

I, too, would ease my old car to a stop

on the side of some country road

and count the stars or admire a sunset

or sit quietly through an afternoon....

 

I'd open the door and go walking

like James Wright across a meadow,

where I might touch a pony's ear and

break into blossom; or, like Hayden

 

Carruth, sustained by the sight

of cows grazing in pastures at night,

I'd stand speechless in the great darkness;

I'd even search on some well-traveled road

 

like Phil Levine in this week's New Yorker,

the poet driving his car to an orchard

outside the city where, for five dollars,

he fills a basket with ********* apples.

r
Written by
Richard Jones
1953 - / American
Lines·Words
16·114
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