The Big Wind

Posted September 18th, 2009

One called ‘Big Wind’ – a grisly(?) one this, getting into the corn(?) routines at the moment in spite of all my… This appeared in a magazine with just ‘Big Wind’ and then the typographer put in almost equally big words ‘Theodore Roethke’ not ‘by Theo…’ (laughter).

The Big Wind

Where were the greenhouses going,

Lunging into the lashing

Wind driving water

So far down the river

All the faucets stopped? -

So we drained the manure-machine

For the steam plant,

Pumping the stale mixture

Into the rusty boilers,

Watching the pressure gauge

Waver over to red,

As the seams hissed

And the live steam

Drove to the far

End of the rose-house,

Where the worst wind was,

Creaking the cypress window-frames,

Cracking so much thin glass

We stayed all night,

Stuffing the holes with burlap;

But she rode it out,

That old rose-house,

She hove into the teeth of it,

The core and pith of that ugly storm,

Ploughing with her stiff prow,

Bucking into the wind-waves

That broke over the whole of her,

Flailing her sides with spray,

Flinging long strings of wet across the roof-top,

Finally veering, wearing themselves out, merely

Whistling thinly under the wind-vents;

She sailed until the calm morning,

Carrying her full cargo of roses.

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