Swift as a pigeon's wings The memory swings, Back into a high vaulted past Where silent stands A child with a dead pigeon In her hands. Upon her face A white stark flash of pain. Because the beating of a heavy rain, Had robbed her of a treasured friend Whose little coral feet had clung To her finger ladder, rung by rung. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SEALS IN PENOBSCOT BAY by KAREN SWENSON LOREINE: A HORSE by ARTHUR DAVISON FICKE LOVE AND TIME by WALTER RALEIGH PSALM OF THOSE WHO GO FORTH BEFORE DAYLIGHT by CARL SANDBURG THE ROSE AND THE GAUNTLET by JOHN STERLING (1806-1844) THAT GENERAL UTILITY RAG, BY OUR OWN IRVING BERLIN by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS CHOEPHOROI: INVOCATION OF AGAMEMNON'S GHOST by AESCHYLUS ROBIN REDBREAST by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM SONNETS OF MANHOOD: 21. THE WORLD'S MARRIAGE MORN by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |