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Birches
When I see birches
bend to left and
right
Across the lines of
straighter darker
trees,
I like to think some
boy's been swinging
them.
But swinging doesn't
bend them down to
stay.
Ice-storms do that.
Often you must have
seen them
Loaded with ice a
sunny winter morning
After a rain. They
click upon
themselves
As the breeze rises,
and turn many-colored
As the stir cracks
and crazes their
enamel.
Soon the sun's
warmth makes them
shed crystal shells
Shattering and
avalanching on the
snow-crust
Such heaps of broken
glass to sweep away
You'd think the
inner dome of heaven
had fallen.
They are dragged to
the withered bracken
by the load,
And they seem not to
break; though once
they are bowed
So low for long,
they never right
themselves:
You may see their
trunks arching in
the woods
Years afterwards,
trailing their
leaves on the ground
Like girls on hands
and knees that throw
their hair
Before them over
their heads to dry
in the sun.
But I was going to
say when Truth broke
in
With all her
matter-of-fact about
the ice-storm
(Now am I free to be
poetical?)
I should prefer to
have some boy bend
them
As he went out and
in to fetch the cows
Some boy too far
from town to learn
baseball,
Whose only play was
what he found
himself,
Summer or winter,
and could play
alone.
One by one he
subdued his father's
trees
By riding them down
over and over again
Until he took the
stiffness out of
them,
And not one but hung
limp, not one was
left
For him to conquer.
He learned all there
was
To learn about not
launching out too
soon
And so not carrying
the tree away
Clear to the ground.
He always kept his
poise
To the top branches,
climbing carefully
With the same pains
you use to fill a
cup
Up to the brim, and
even above the brim.
Then he flung
outward, feet first,
with a swish,
Kicking his way down
through the air to
the ground.
So was I once myself
a swinger of
birches.
And so I dream of
going back to be.
It's when I'm weary
of considerations,
And life is too much
like a pathless wood
Where your face
burns and tickles
with the cobwebs
Broken across it,
and one eye is
weeping
From a twig's having
lashed across it
open.
I'd like to get away
from earth awhile
And then come back
to it and begin
over.
May no fate
willfully
misunderstand me
And half grant what
I wish and snatch me
away
Not to return.
Earth's the right
place for love:
I don't know where
it's likely to go
better.
I'd like to go by
climbing a birch
tree,
And climb black
branches up a
snow-white trunk
Toward heaven, till
the tree could bear
no more,
But dipped its top
and set me down
again.
That would be good
both going and
coming back.
One could do worse
than be a swinger of
birches.
Robert Frost

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