Showing posts with label The Dragon-Fly by Alfred Lord Tennyson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Dragon-Fly by Alfred Lord Tennyson. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

The Dragon-fly by Alfred Lord Tennyson and The Dragonfly By Louise Bogan

Green dragonfly on the spout of my little pink watering can this summer.


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The Dragon-fly

By Alfred Lord Tennyson

Today I saw the dragon-fly
Come from the wells where he did lie.
An inner impulse rent the veil
Of his old husk: from head to tail
Came out clear plates of sapphire mail.
He dried his wings: like gauze they grew;
Thro' crofts and pastures wet with dew
A living flash of light he flew.

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Blue dragonfly in August

The Dragonfly
By Louise Bogan

You are made of almost nothing
But of enough
To be great eyes
And diaphanous double vans;
To be ceaseless movement,
Unending hunger
Grappling love.

Link between water and air,
Earth repels you.
Light touches you only to shift into iridescence
Upon your body and wings.

Twice-born, predator,
You split into the heat.
Swift beyond calculation or capture
You dart into the shadow
Which consumes you.

You rocket into the day.
But at last, when the wind flattens the grasses,
For you, the design and purpose stop.

And you fall
With the other husks of summer.

 
A dragonfly-inspired mixed-media collage I did last year.

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