Grass

I grow in places

others can’t,

 

where wind is high

and water scant.

 

I drink the rain,

I eat the sun;

 

before the prairie winds

I run.

 

I see, I sprout,

I grow, I creep,

 

and in the ice

and snow, I sleep.

 

On steppe or veld

or pampas dry,

 

beneath the grand,

enormous sky,

 

I make my humble,

bladed bed.

 

And where there’s level ground,

I spread.


Joyce Sidman, "Grass" from Ubiquitous: Celebrating Nature’s Survivors. Copyright © 2010 by Joyce Sidman. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
Source: Ubiquitous: Celebrating Nature’s Survivors (Houghton Mifflin, 2010)
More Poems by Joyce Sidman