Sunday, May 1, 2011

Where I come from

Where I come From
by Elizabeth Brewster

People are made of places. They carry with them
hints of jungles or mountains, a tropic grace
or the cool eyes of sea gazers. Atmosphere of cities
how different drops from them, like the smell of smog
or the almost-not-smell of tulips in the spring,
nature tidily plotted with a guidebook;
or the smell of work, glue factories maybe,
chromium-plated offices; smell of subways
crowded at rush hours.


Where I come from, people
carry woods in their minds, acres of pine woods;
blueberry patches in the burned-out bush;
wooden farmhouses, old, in need of paint,
with yards where hens and chickens circle about,
clucking aimlessly; battered schoolhouses
behind which violets grow. Spring and winter
are the mind's chief seasons: ice and the breaking of ice.


A door in the mind blows open, and there blows
a frosty wind from fields of snow.

MLA Citation for Video


Back where I come From. Perf. Kenny chesney. Youtube Where I come From. 04 Mar. 2009. 1 May 2011 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-1sbjI_Ggqc.

MLA Citation for Poem

Roberts, Edgar V., and Darlene Stock. Stotler. "Where I come From." Literature an Introduction to Reading and Writing. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson / Prentice Hall, 2008. 467. Print.

No comments:

Post a Comment