Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Kite by John Frederick Freeman
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The Kite

    By John Frederick Freeman



    It was a day
    All blue and lifting white,
    When I went into the fields with Frank
    To fly his kite.

    The fields were aged, bare,
    Shut between houses everywhere.
    All the way there
    The wind tugged at the kite to take it
    Untethered, toss and break it;
    But Frank held fast, and I
    Walked with him admiringly;
    In his light brave and fine
    How bright was mine!

    We tailed the kite
    While the wind flapped its purple face
    And yellow head.
    Frank's yellow head
    Was scarcely higher, and not so bright.
    "Let go!" he cried, and I let go
    And watched the kite
    Swaying and rising so
    That I was rooted to the place,
    Watching the kite
    Rise into the blue,
    Lifting its head against the white
    Against the sun,
    Against the height
    That far-off, farther drew;
    Shivering there
    In that fine air
    As we below shivered with delight
    And fear.

    There it floated
    Among the birds and clouds at ease
    Of others all unnoted,
    Swimming above the ranked stiff trees.
    And I lay down, looking up at the sky,
    The clouds and birds that floated
    By others still unnoted,
    And that swaying kite
    Specking the light:
    Looking up at the sky,
    The birds and clouds that drew
    Nearer, leaving the blue,
    Stooping, and then brushing me,
    With such tenderness touching me
    That I had still lain there
    In those fields bare,
    Forgetting the kite;
    For every cloud was now a kite
    Streaming with light.



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