Ruth Stone: Black High Flung Patterns of Flocking Birds

Always on the Train

Writing poems about writing poems
is like rolling bales of hay in Texas.
Nothing but the horizon to stop you.

But consider the railroad’s edge of metal trash;
bird perches, miles of telephone wires.
What is so innocent as grazing cattle?
If you think about it, it turns into words.

Trash is so cheerful; flying up
like grasshoppers in front of the reaper.
The dust devil whirls it aloft; bronze candy wrappers,
squares of clear plastic–windows on a house of air.

Below the weedy edge in last year’s mat,
red and silver beer cans.
In bits blown equally everywhere,
the gaiety of flying paper
and the black high flung patterns of flocking birds.

–Ruth Stone

1074630753_9fa8af0d54
Poet Ruth Stone, in Vermont

2 Replies to “Ruth Stone: Black High Flung Patterns of Flocking Birds”

  1. Thanks for posting this one, Deborah. I entertained myself in rereading the delightful imagery contained in the marvellous conversational tone of this poem. it was very much like sitting with a dear friend, listening to an enthusiastic retelling of what she was seeing. Clear, clear pictures in the mind! G

  2. G, I resonated with the way you described Stone’s poem–conversational, but such clear images. Thanks for that.

Comments are closed.

%d bloggers like this: