Sir John Alfred Arnesby Brown, "Full Summer, Ludham, Norfolk" |
Fetching
Cows
The
black one, last as usual swings her head
And
coils a black tongue round a grass-tuft. I
Watch
her soft weight come down, her split feet spread.
In
front, the others swing and slouch; they roll
Their
great Greek eyes and breathe out milky gusts
From
muzzles black and shiny as wet coal.
The
collie trots, bored, at my heels, then plops
Into
the ditch. The sea makes a tired sound
That's
always stopping though it never stops.
A
haycart squats prickeared agains the sky.
Hay
breath and milk breath. Far out in the West
The
wrecked sun founders though its colours fly.
The
collie's bored. There's noting to control . . .
The
black cow is two native carriers
Bringing
its belly home, slung from a pole.
Norman
McCaig
Some poems take you
away for a moment, whisk you off to a different time or place. It’s like a
holiday for the mind, a chance to escape your surroundings and be, well, anywhere
else. That’s the magic of this poem.
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