Authors: Carl Sandburg
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Or would you say love is a flamingo, with pink
                         feathersâ
  a soft sunset pink, a sweet gleaming naked
                         pinkâ
  and with enough long pink feathers
  you could make the fan for a fan dance
  and hear a girl telling her lover,
    Speak, my chosen one,
    and give me your wish
    as to what manner of fan dance
    you would have from me
    in the cool of evening
    or the black velvet sheen of midnight.
Could it be love is a flamingo?
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Or is love a big red apple, and you don't know
whether to bite into itâand you knock on wood
and call off your luck numbers and hold your
                         breathâ
and you put your teeth into it and get a
                         mouthful,
tasting all there is to it,
and whether it's sweet and wild
or a dry mush you want to spit out,
it's something else than you expected.
I'm asking, sir, is love a big red apple?
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Or maybe love is goofer dust, I hadn't thought
                         about thatâ
for you go to the goofer tree at midnight
and gather the leaves and crush them into fine
                         dust,
very fine dust, sir, and when your man sleeps
you sprinkle it in his shoes and he's helpless
and from then on he can't get away from you,
he's snared and tangled and can't keep from
                         loving you.
Could goofer dust be the answer?
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And I've heard some say love is a spy and a
                         sneak,
a blatherer, a gabby mouth,
tattling and tittering as it tattles,
and you believe it and take it to your heart
and nurse it like good news,
like heaven-sent news meant for you
and you onlyâprecious little you.
Have you heard love comes creeping and cheating
                         like that?
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And are they after beguiling and befoozling us
when they tell us love is a rose, a red red rose,
the mystery of leaves folded over and under
and you can take it to pieces and throw it away
petal by petal into the wind blowing it away
or you can wear it for a soft spot of crimson
in your hair, at your breast,
and you can waltz and tango wearing your sweet
                        crimson rose
and take it home and lay it on a window sill and see it
wither brown, curl black, and shrivel
until one day you're not careful
and it crackles into dust in your hand
and the wind whisks it whither you know not,
whither you care not,
for it is just one more flame of a rose
that came with its red blush and crimson bloom
and did the best it could with what it had
and nobody wins, nobody loses,
and what's one more rose
when on any street corner
in bright summer mornings
you see them with bunches of roses,
their hands out toward you calling,
    Roses today, fresh roses,
    fresh-cut roses today
    a rose for you sir,
    the ladies like roses,
    now is the time,
    fresh roses sir.
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And I'm waitingâfor days and weeks and months
I've been waiting to see some flower seller,
one of those hawkers of roses,
I've been waiting to hear one of them calling,
    A cabbage with every rose,
    a good sweet cabbage with every rose,
    a head of cabbage for soup or slaw or stew,
    cabbage with the leaves folded over
    and under like a miracle
    and you can eat it and stand up and walk,
    today and today only your last chance
    a head of cabbage with every single lovely rose.
And any time and any day I hear a flower seller so calling
I shall be quick and I shall buy
two roses and two cabbages,
the roses for my lover
and the cabbages for little luckless me.
Or am I wrongâis love a rose you can buy and give away and keep for yourself cabbages, my lord and master, cabbages, kind sir?
I am asking, can you?
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And it won't help any, it won't get us anywhere,
it won't wipe away what has been
nor hold off what is to be,
if you hear me saying
love is a little white bird
and the flight of it so fast
you can't see it
and you know it's there
only by the faint whirr of its wings
and the hush song coming so low to your ears
you fear it might be silence
and you listen keen and you listen long
and you know it's more than silence
for you get the hush song so lovely
it hurts and cuts into your heart
and what you want is to give more than you can get
and you'd like to write it but it can't be written
and you'd like to sing it but you don't dare try
because the little white bird sings it better than you can
so you listen and while you listen you pray
and after you pray you meditate, then pray more
and one day it's as though a great slow wind
had washed you clean and strong inside and out
and another day it's as though you had gone to sleep
in an early afternoon sunfall and your sleeping heart
dumb and cold as a round polished stone,
and the little white bird's hush song
telling you nothing can harm you,
the days to come can weave in and weave out
and spin their fabrics and designs for you
and nothing can harm youâ
unless you change yourself into a thing of harm
nothing can harm you.
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The little white bird is my candidate.
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you
the little white bird you can't see
though you can hear its hush song
and when you hear that hush song it's love
and I'm ready to swear to itâ
you can bring in a stack of affidavits
and I'll swear to it and sign my name
to every last one, so help me God.
And if a fat bumbling shopworn court clerk tells me,
Hold up your hand, I'll hold up my hand all right
and when he bumbles and mumbles to me like I was
one more witness it was work for him to give the oath to,
when he blabs, You do solemnly swear so help you God
that in this cause you will tell the truth,
the whole truth and nothing but the truth,
I 'll say to him, I do, and I 'll say to myself,
And no thanks to you and you could be more
                         immaculate
with the name of God.
I am done.
I have finished.
I give you the little white birdâ
and my thanks for your hearing meâ
    and my prayers for you,
Offering and Rebuff    my deep silent prayers.
I could love you
as dry roots love rain.
I could hold you
as branches in the wind
brandish petals.
Forgive me for speaking
so soon.
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Let your heart look
on white sea spray
and be lonely.
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Love is a fool star.
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You and a ring of stars
may mention my name
and then forget me.
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Morning Glory BlueLove is a fool star.
The blue of morning glory climbs fences and houses.
It is a Gettysburg Union blue setting itself against
a morning haze.
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The blue of morning glory spots and spatters a rail
fence.
The fence zigzags and the morning glory staggers on
High Momentsa path of sea-blue, sky-blue, Gettysburg Union blue.
Keep this flower to remember me by.
So she told him.
Keep this, remember me, remember.
Fold this flower where you never forget.
Put me by where time no longer counts.
Then come back to a sure remembering.
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Night itself, night is one long dark flower.
She said night knows deep rememberings,
All flowers being some kind of remembering
And night itself folding up like
    many smooth dark flowers.
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Find me like the night finds.
She measured herself so.
Keep me like the night keeps
For I have night deeps in me.
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Flesh is a doom and a prison.
Flesh jails those only flesh.
    Air speaks nevertheless,
    spray,  fire,  air,
    thin voices beyond capture
    save only in remembering
    the luster of lost stars,
    the reach for a wafer of moon.
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    Let us talk it over long
    and wear cream gold buttons
    and be proud we have anger and pride together,
    remembering high loveliness hovers in time
    and is made of passing moments.
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    I have kept high moments.
Mummy    They go round and round in me.
Blood is blood and bone is bone.