Looking Across the Fields and Watching the Birds Fly
Among the more irritating minor ideas 
Of Mr. Homburg during his visits home 
To Concord, at the edge of things, was this: 
To think away the grass, the trees, the clouds, 
Not to transform them into other things, 
Is only what the sun does every day, 
Until we say to ourselves that there may be 
A pensive nature, a mechanical 
And slightly detestable operandum, free 
From man's ghost, larger and yet a little like, 
Without his literature and without his gods . . . 
No doubt we live beyond ourselves in air,