1
Many animals that our fathers killed in America
Had quick eyes.
They stared about wildly,
When the moon went dark.
The new moon falls into the freight yards
Of cities in the south,
But the loss of the moon to the dark hands of Chicago
Does not matter to the deer
In this northern field.
2
What is that tall woman doing
There, in the trees?
I can hear rabbits and mourning dovees whispering together
In the dark grass, there
Under the trees.
3
I look about wildly.
(James Wright)
More Poetry from James Wright:
James Wright Poems based on Topics: Nature, Cities, America- The Lambs on the Boulder (James Wright Poems)
- Sappho (James Wright Poems)
- A Secret Gratitude (James Wright Poems)
- The Minneapolis Poem (James Wright Poems)
- Bologna: A Poem About Gold (James Wright Poems)
- A Way To Make A Living (James Wright Poems)