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A DANCE FOR THE INLAND SEA

 

Water that moves, in a bodylike stream,

through its cool channels fills the warm prairie’s dream.

Waking to dream it, the grass-moving sky

 

pours with grasses. Big Bluestem’s drinking roots lie

nine feet down the waving, remembering sod

they have swum through, to feed on, to build. When it swings

like a wing in small flight, when it sways,

turkey feet murmur, red three-toed feet sing.

 

Little Bluestem, as copper as autumn or clay,

floating seeds past the prairie’s dense, watery hand

till they shimmer to columns, wet smoke on the land;

 

Indian Grass, lapping up the spattering sun;

prairies step slower than palaces, down

under the teeming roof of the ground,

quiet as animals. Then, when they rise,

prairies, like palaces, loom, and surprise.

 

 

From Calendars


 

 
  Copyright 2009 Annie Finch