Louise Glück, The Wild Iris, 1992

    Daisies

    Go ahead: say what you're thinking. The garden
    is not the real world. Machines
    are not the real world. Say frankly what any fool
    could read in your face: it makes sense
    to avoid us, to resist
    nostalgia. It is
    not modern enough, the sound the wind makes
    stirring a meadow of daisies: the mind
    cannot shine following it. And the mind
    wants to shine, plainly, as
    machines shine, and not
    grow deep, as, for example, roots. It is very touching,
    all the same, to see you cautiously
    approaching the meadow's border in early morning
    when no one could possibly
    be watching you. The longer you stand at the edge,
    the more nervous you seem. No one wants to hear
    impressions of the natural world: you will be
    laughed at again; scorn will be piled on you.
    As for what you're actually
    hearing this morning: think twice
    before you tell anyone what was said in this field
    and by whom.