Our House Poem by Sophie Cabot Black

Our House



As the leaves turn their backs on us
And the lilac gives over to dusk, nothing
Is ever certain, not even the house, stubborn

In twilight as it outlasts the grove
It was wrestled from. Those left behind,
The oak and ancient elm, lean against each other

As if in consent. Out of dirt, out of
Some small mistake, comes the seedling;
It too has learned to watch, as we walk in and out

Of what wilderness was, and will again become,
As we enter our home, the way we enter love
Returning from elsewhere to call out
Each other's names, pulling the door closed behind us.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Sophie Cabot Black

Sophie Cabot Black

New York City, New York
Close
Error Success