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Poem by Sylvia Plath Magnolia Shoals Up here among the gull cries we stroll through a maze of pale red-mottled relics, shells, claws as if it were summer still. That season has turned its back. Through the green sea gardens stall, bow, and recover their look of the imperishable gardens in an antique book or tapestries on a wall, leaves behind us warp and lapse. The late month withers, as well. Below us a white gull keeps the weed-slicked shelf for his own, hustles other gulls off. Crabs rove over his field of stone; mussels cluster blue as grapes : his beak brings the harvest in. The watercolorist grips his brush in the stringent air. The horizon's bare of ships, the beach and the rocks are bare. He paints a blizzard of gulls, wings drumming in the winter. Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath's other poems: 1585 Views |
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