The shadow crawls up canyon walls; the rim rocks flush to pink A sleepy night hawk lurches up among the pines to soar, And we can hear a thirsty deer tiptoeing down to drink Among the glimmering birches on the hazy canyon floor. Sister, sister, it seems a staring pity Somewhere there is a city, and one time there was a war. Around the bend the thickets end in field and garden spot, And little ranches lifting smokes that make the twilight sweet. Beneath the smokes the women folks are watching pan and pot, While joking men are drifting in to smell the sizzling meat. Sister, sister, and is it truth or lying That somewhere folks are dying for the want of things to eat? Along the hill the winds are still, and still, blue shadows rise, And quiet bats are winging out, but down the canyon floor The swift creek purls in dusky swirls that mind me of your eyes And keeps the stillness singing here for ever, evermore. Sister, sister, and is it true, I wonder Somewhere the loud streets thunder, and one time there was a war. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE IMMORTAL MIND by GEORGE GORDON BYRON THE SWAMP ANGEL by HERMAN MELVILLE TO A LADY: SHE REFUSING TO CONTINUE A DISPUTE WITH ME by MATTHEW PRIOR SUNSET WINGS by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI SONNET: 109 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE |