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Saturday, July 27, 2013

Poem-A-Day: Atavism by Elinor Wylie

Atavism
 
 

I always was afraid of Somes's Pond: 

Not the little pond, by which the willow stands, 

Where laughing boys catch alewives in their hands 

In brown, bright shallows; but the one beyond. 

There, when the frost makes all the birches burn 

Yellow as cow-lilies, and the pale sky shines 

Like a polished shell between black spruce and pines, 

Some strange thing tracks us, turning where we turn. 

 

You'll say I dream it, being the true daughter 

Of those who in old times endured this dread. 

Look! Where the lily-stems are showing red 

A silent paddle moves below the water, 

A sliding shape has stirred them like a breath; 

Tall plumes surmount a painted mask of death.

 

 

 

Today's poem is in the public domain. 

About This Poem
Somes's Pond is located on Mount Desert Island in Maine, where a young Elinor Wylie would summer with her family.
Work by Wylie

(Kent State University Press, 2005)

 

Poem-A-Day
Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-A-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on 
weekdays and classic poems on weekends. Browse the Poem-A-Day Archive.  
July 27, 2013

Elinor Hoyt was born in Somerville, New Jersey, on September 7, 1885. Though also notorious for her numerous romances, including with eventual husband Horace Wylie, she was primarily renowned among her contemporaries for the quality of her poetry and fiction. Wylie died in 1928.
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