Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.
BereftLoureine Aber
From “City Lanes”
O
I am crying to you piteously as a hungry bird,
I am crying to you for your beautiful ports
And harbors,
For the slow beauty of your Statue and its silent hope.
O my country, I would slink into the crevices of your egoism,
And squat on the doormat of your excellences.
But what shall I do when mad spring comes,
And blossoms come,
And wild sap comes—
But my lover comes not?
Or the little wind blowing your ships to sea;
But what shall I do when the spring comes in,
And flowers shoot up in me?