1. Things to Do in the Belly of the Whale
  2. From Blossoms
  3. Wild Geese
  4. The Peace of Wild Things
  5. My Gift to You
  6. Departing Spring
  7. The Skylark
  8. What a Strange Thing!
  9. Although The Wind …
  10. The Old Pond
  11. Spring Is Like A Perhaps Hand
  12. Hast thou 2 loaves of bread …
  13. Youth and Age
  14. A Postcard From the Volcano
  15. The Kraken
  16. He wishes for the Cloths of Heaven
  17. There Is a Solitude of Space
  18. Because I Could Not Stop for Death
  19. Mad Song
  20. Answer July
  21. Success Is Counted Sweetest
  22. Hope Is the Thing with Feathers
  23. The Bluebird
  24. A Vision of the End
  25. The Crying of Water
  26. A Rose Has Thorns As Well As Honey
  27. Winter
  28. The Dark Cavalier
  29. There is no Life or Death
  30. Sheep in Winter
  31. To a Snowflake
  32. Sextain
  33. A Crocodile
  34. Sea Fever
  35. The Giant Cactus of Arizona
  36. The Coming of Night
  37. Going to the Picnic
  38. Moon Tonight
  39. A Southern Night
  40. Greenness
  41. Twilight
  42. On the Wing
  43. In Summer
  44. Before Parting
  45. Sonnet
  46. The Red Wheelbarrow
  47. Acceptance
  48. At The Pool
  49. Incurable
  50. Bluebird and Cardinal
  51. [Say What You Will, And Scratch My Heart To Find]
  52. The River
  53. Vas Doloris
  54. Squirrel
  55. Ghosts
  56. The Spirit of Poetry
  57. Nightfall in the Tropics
  58. Journey of the Magi Scheduled for 23rd December 2024
  59. The City Lights Scheduled for 7th January 2025
Forest pool

I like to stand right still awhile 
Beside some forest pool. 
The reeds around it smell so fresh, 
The waters look so cool! 
Sometimes I just hop in and wade, 
And have a lot of fun, 
Playing with bugs that dart across 
The water in the sun. 

They lodge here at this little pool—
All sorts of bugs and things 
That hop about its shady banks, 
Or dart along with wings,
Or scamper on the water top, 
As water-striders go, 
Or strange back-swimmers upside down, 
Using their legs to row, 
Or the stiff, flashing dragon flies
The gentle damoiselle
The clumsy, sturdy water-bugs,
And scorpions as well, 
That come on top to get fresh air
From homes beneath the pool, 
Where water-boatmen have their nooks, 
On pebbles, as a rule. 

And then, behold! Kingfisher comes, 
That great big royal bird! 
To him what is the dragon fly 
That kept the pool life stirred?
Or water-tigers terrible 
That murder bugs all day? 
Kingfisher comes, and each of these 
Would hide itself away! 

He swoops and swallows what he will,
A stone-fly or a frog
Wing’d things rush frightened through the air, 
Others to hole and log. 
The little pool that held them all 
I watch grow very bare, 
But fisher knows his hide and seek—
He’ll find some one somewhere!
 

Effie Lee Newsome (1885–1979) was a Harlem Renaissance writer who mainly wrote children’s poems.


To read more poems, click here.