Andrew Young looks at the natural world with engaging perception and originality, as these two little pieces show. They come from his Selected Poems, published by Carcanet at £9.95.
SPRING FLOWERS
Now we enjoy the rain,
When at each neighbour’s door we hear
‘How big primroses are this year’ -
Tale we may live to hear again -
And dandelions flood
The orchards as though apple-trees
Dropped in the grass ripe oranges,
Boughs still in pink impatient bud,
When too we cannot choose,
But one foot and the other set
In celandine and violet,
Walking in gold and purple shoes,
Rain that through winter weeks
Splashed on our face and window pane,
And rising in these flowers again
Brightens their eyes and fats their cheeks.
YOUNG OATS
These oats in autumn sown,
That stood through all the winter’s dearth
In so small ranks of green
That flints like pigmies’ bones lay bare
And greater stones were seen
To change to hares and rise and run,
Today to such a height are grown
That drawn up by the sun,
That Indian conjuror,
The field is levitated from the earth.
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