In Envy of Cows

The cow swings her head in a deep drowsy half-circle to and over

Flank and shoulder, lunging

At flies; then fragrantly plunging

Down at the web-washed grass and the golden clover,

Wrenching sideways to get the full tingle; with one warm nudge,

One somnolent wide smudge

Sacred to kine,

Crushing a murmurous of late lush August to wine!

The sky is even water-tone behind suave poplar trees—

Color of glass; the cows

Occasionally arouse

That color, disturb the pellucid cool poplar frieze

With beauty of motion slow and succinct like some grave privilege

Fulfilled. They taste the edge

Of August, they need

No more: they have rose vapors, flushed silence, pulpy milkweed.

This poem is in the public domain. Published in Poem-a-Day on September 8, 2019, by the Academy of American Poets.