Thomas McGrath (1916–1990), poet and screenwriter, grew up on a farm in North Dakota. He earned a BA from the University of North Dakota and was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship at Oxford. He taught at Colby College in Maine; at Los Angeles State College, from which he was dismissed because of his appearance, as an unfriendly witness, before the House Committee on Un-American Activities in 1953; and at North Dakota State University and Minnesota State University. His best-known work is Letter to an Imaginary Friend, published as a single poem in 1997 by Copper Canyon Press.

Beyond the Red River

by Thomas McGrath

The birds have flown their summer skies to the south,
And the flower-money is drying in the banks of bent grass
Which the bumble bee has abandoned. We wait for a winter lion,
Body of ice-crystals and sombrero of dead leaves.

A month ago, from the salt engines of the sea,
A machinery of early storms rolled toward the holiday houses
Where summer still dozed in the pool-side chairs, sipping
An aging whiskey of distances and departures.


Now the long freight of autumn goes smoking out of the land.
My possibles are all packed up, but still I do not leave.
I am happy enough here, where Dakota drifts wild in the universe,
Where the prairie is starting to shake in the surf of the winter
    dark.


From Selected Poems 1938–1988 (Copper Canyon Press, 1988).


Read on . . .

“What We Have,” a poem by Ruth Stone