Long Summer

Gold as an infant’s humming dream,

Stamped with its timeless, tropic blush,

The steady sun stands in the air

And burns like Moses’ holy bush.

And burns while nothing it consumes;

The smoking branch but greener grows,

The crackling briar, from budded lips,

A floating stream of blossom blows.

A daze of hours, a blaze of noons,

Licks my cold shadow from the ground;

A flaming trident rears each dawn

To stir the blood of earth around.

Unsinged beneath the furnace sky

The frenzied beetle runs reborn,

The ant his antic mountain moves,

The rampant ram rewinds his horn.

I see the crazy bees drop fat

From tulips ten times gorged and dry;

I see the sated swallow plunge

To drink the dazzled waterfly.

A halo flares around my head,

A sunflower flares across the sun,

While down the summer’s seamless haze

Such feasts of milk and honey run

That lying with my orchid love,

Whose kiss no frost of age can sever,

I cannot doubt the cold is dead,

The gold earth turned to good – forever.