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Laurie Lee

Apples

Behold the apples’ rounded worlds:
juice-green of July rain,
the black polestar of flowers, the rind
mapped with its crimson stain.

The russet, crab and cottage red
burn to the sun’s hot brass,
then drop like sweat from every branch
and bubble in the grass.

They lie as wanton as they fall,
and where they fall and break,
the stallion clamps his crunching jaws,
the starling stabs his beak.

In each plump gourd the cidery bite
of boys’ teeth tears the skin;
the waltzing wasp consumes his share,
the bent worm enters in.

I, with as easy hunger, take
entire my season’s dole;
welcome the ripe, the sweet, the sour,
the hollow and the whole.

About the poet

Laurie LeeLaurie Lee
1914-1997

 
By the same poet
Home From Abroad
Apples
April Rise
Day of These Days
Milkmaid
Christmas Landscape
The Long War for Peace Day
Town Owl
 
Related books
Laurie Lee at amazon.co.uk

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