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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Voice on the Wind, by Madison Julius Cawein
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  • Title: A Voice on the Wind
  • and Other Poems
  • Author: Madison Julius Cawein
  • Release Date: October 6, 2010 [EBook #33940]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A VOICE ON THE WIND ***
  • Produced by David Garcia, Dianne Nolan and the Online
  • Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
  • file was produced from images generously made available
  • by The Kentuckiana Digital Library)
  • A Voice on the Wind
  • AND OTHER POEMS
  • by
  • Madison Cawein
  • [Illustration]
  • Louisville
  • John P. Morton & Company, Publishers
  • 1902
  • COPYRIGHTED 1902, BY MADISON CAWEIN
  • For permission to reprint several of the poems included in this
  • volume thanks are due to the _Atlantic Monthly_, _Harper's
  • Magazine_, _The Century Magazine_, _Smart Set_, _Saturday
  • Evening Post_, and _Lippincott's Magazine_.
  • INSCRIBED
  • TO
  • EDMUND GOSSE
  • AS A SLIGHT TOKEN OF APPRECIATION AND ESTEEM
  • PROEM.
  • OH, FOR A SOUL THAT FULFILLS
  • MUSIC LIKE THAT OF A BIRD!
  • THRILLING WITH RAPTURE THE HILLS,
  • HEEDLESS IF ANY ONE HEARD.
  • OR, LIKE THE FLOWER THAT BLOOMS
  • LONE IN THE MIDST OF THE TREES,
  • FILLING THE WOODS WITH PERFUMES,
  • CARELESS IF ANY ONE SEES.
  • OR, LIKE THE WANDERING WIND,
  • OVER THE MEADOWS THAT SWINGS,
  • BRINGING WILD SWEETS TO MANKIND,
  • KNOWING NOT THAT WHICH IT BRINGS.
  • OH, FOR A WAY TO IMPART
  • BEAUTY, NO MATTER HOW HARD!
  • LIKE UNTO NATURE, WHOSE ART
  • NEVER ONCE DREAMS OF REWARD.
  • A Voice on the Wind
  • A VOICE ON THE WIND
  • She walks with the wind on the windy height
  • When the rocks are loud and the waves are white,
  • And all night long she calls through the night,
  • "O, my children, come home!"
  • Her bleak gown, torn as a tattered cloud,
  • Tosses around her like a shroud,
  • While over the deep her voice rings loud,--
  • "O, my children, come home, come home!
  • O, my children, come home!"
  • Who is she who wanders alone,
  • When the wind drives sheer and the rain is blown?
  • Who walks all night and makes her moan,
  • "O, my children, come home!"
  • Whose face is raised to the blinding gale;
  • Whose hair blows black and whose eyes are pale,
  • While over the world is heard her wail,--
  • "O, my children, come home, come home!
  • O, my children, come home!"
  • She walks with the wind in the windy wood;
  • The sad rain drips from her hair and hood,
  • And her cry sobs by, like a ghost pursued,
  • "O, my children, come home!"
  • Where the trees are gaunt and the rocks are drear,
  • The owl and the fox crouch down in fear,
  • While wild through the wood her voice they hear,--
  • "O, my children, come home, come home!
  • O, my children, come home!"
  • Who is she who shudders by
  • When the boughs blow bare and the dead leaves fly?
  • Who walks all night with her wailing cry,
  • "O, my children, come home!"
  • Who, strange of look, and wild of tongue,
  • With pale feet wounded and hands wan-wrung,
  • Sweeps on and on with her cry, far-flung,--
  • "O, my children, come home, come home!
  • O, my children, come home!"
  • 'Tis the Spirit of Autumn, no man sees,
  • The mother of Death and Mysteries,
  • Who cries on the wind all night to these,
  • "O, my children, come home!"
  • The Spirit of Autumn, pierced with pain,
  • Calling her children home again,
  • Death and Dreams, through ruin and rain,
  • "O, my children, come home, come home!
  • O, my children, come home!"
  • THE LAND OF HEARTS MADE WHOLE
  • Do you know the way that goes
  • Over fields of rue and rose,--
  • Warm of scent and hot of hue,
  • Roofed with heaven's bluest blue,--
  • To the Vale of Dreams Come True?
  • Do you know the path that twines,
  • Banked with elder-bosks and vines,
  • Under boughs that shade a stream,
  • Hurrying, crystal as a gleam,
  • To the Hills of Love a-Dream?
  • Tell me, tell me, have you gone
  • Through the fields and woods of dawn,
  • Meadowlands and trees that roll,
  • Great of grass and huge of bole,
  • To the Land of Hearts Made Whole?
  • On the way, among the fields,
  • Poppies lift vermilion shields,
  • In whose hearts the golden Noon,
  • Murmuring her drowsy tune,
  • Rocks the sleepy bees that croon.
  • On the way, amid the woods,
  • Mandrakes muster multitudes,
  • 'Mid whose blossoms, white as tusk,
  • Glides the glimmering Forest-Dusk,
  • With her fluttering moths of musk.
  • Here you hear the stealthy stir
  • Of shy lives of hoof and fur;
  • Harmless things that hide and peer,
  • Hearts that sucked the milk of fear--
  • Fox and rabbit, squirrel and deer.
  • Here you see the mossy flight
  • Of faint forms that love the night--
  • Whippoorwill- and owlet-things,
  • Whose far call before you brings
  • Wonder-worlds of happenings.
  • Now in sunlight, now in shade,
  • Water, like a brandished blade,
  • Foaming forward, wild of flight,
  • Startles then arrests the sight,
  • Whirling steely loops of light.
  • Thro' the tree-tops, down the vale,
  • Breezes pass and leave a trail
  • Of cool music that the birds,
  • Following in happy herds,
  • Gather up in twittering words.
  • Blossoms, frail and manifold,
  • Strew the way with pearl and gold;
  • Blurs, that seem the darling print
  • Of the Springtime's feet, or glint
  • Of her twinkling gown's torn tint.
  • There the myths of old endure:
  • Dreams that are the world-soul's cure;
  • Things that have no place or play
  • In the facts of Everyday
  • 'Round your presence smile and sway.
  • Suddenly your eyes may see,
  • Stepping softly from her tree,
  • Slim of form and wet with dew,
  • The brown dryad; lips the hue
  • Of a berry bit into.
  • You may mark the naiad rise
  • From her pool's reflected skies;
  • In her gaze the heaven that dreams,
  • Starred, in twilight-haunted streams,
  • Mixed with water's grayer gleams.
  • You may see the laurel's girth,
  • Big of bloom, give fragrant birth
  • To the oread whose hair,
  • Musk and darkness, light and air,
  • Fills the hush with wonder there.
  • You may mark the rocks divide,
  • And the faun before you glide,
  • Piping on a magic reed,
  • Sowing many a music seed,
  • From which bloom and mushroom bead.
  • Of the rain and sunlight born,
  • Young of beard and young of horn,
  • You may see the satyr lie,
  • With a very knowing eye,
  • Teaching youngling birds to fly.
  • These shall cheer and follow you
  • Through the Vale of Dreams Come True;
  • Wind-like voices, leaf-like feet;
  • Forms of mist and hazy heat,
  • In whose pulses sunbeams beat.
  • Lo! you tread enchanted ground!
  • From the hollows all around
  • Elf and spirit, gnome and fay,
  • Guide your feet along the way
  • Till the dewy close of day.
  • Then beside you, jet on jet,
  • Emerald-hued or violet,
  • Flickering swings a firefly light,
  • Aye to guide your steps a-right
  • From the valley to the height.
  • Steep the way is; when at last
  • Vale and wood and stream are passed,
  • From the heights you shall behold
  • Panther heavens of spotted gold
  • Tiger-tawny deeps unfold.
  • You shall see on stocks and stones
  • Sunset's bell-deep color tones
  • Fallen; and the valleys filled
  • With dusk's purple music, spilled
  • On the silence rapture-thrilled.
  • Then, as answering bell greets bell,
  • Night ring in her miracle
  • Of the doméd dark, o'er-rolled,
  • Note on note, with starlight cold,
  • 'Twixt the moon's broad peal of gold.
  • On the hill-top Love-a-Dream
  • Shows you then her window-gleam;
  • Brings you home and folds your soul
  • In the peace of vale and knoll,
  • In the Land of Hearts Made Whole.
  • THE WIND OF WINTER
  • The Winter Wind, the wind of death,
  • Who knocked upon my door,
  • Now through the key-hole entereth,
  • Invisible and hoar;
  • He breathes around his icy breath
  • And treads the flickering floor.
  • I heard him, wandering in the night,
  • Tap at my window pane,
  • With ghostly fingers, snowy white,
  • I heard him tug in vain,
  • Until the shuddering candle-light
  • With fear did cringe and strain.
  • The fire, awakened by his voice,
  • Leapt up with frantic arms,
  • Like some wild babe that greets with noise
  • Its father home who storms,
  • With rosy gestures that rejoice
  • And crimson kiss that warms.
  • Now in the hearth he sits and, drowned
  • Among the ashes, blows;
  • Or through the room goes stealing 'round
  • On cautious-stepping toes,
  • Deep mantled in the drowsy sound
  • Of night that sleets and snows.
  • And oft, like some thin fairy-thing,
  • The stormy hush amid,
  • I hear his captive trebles ring
  • Beneath the kettle's lid;
  • Or now a harp of elfland string
  • In some dark cranny hid.
  • Again I hear him, imp-like, whine
  • Cramped in the gusty flue;
  • Or knotted in the resinous pine
  • Raise goblin cry and hue,
  • While through the smoke his eyeballs shine,
  • A sooty red and blue.
  • At last I hear him, nearing dawn,
  • Take up his roaring broom,
  • And sweep wild leaves from wood and lawn,
  • And from the heavens the gloom,
  • To show the gaunt world lying wan,
  • And morn's cold rose a-bloom.
  • THE WIND OF SUMMER
  • From the hills and far away
  • All the long, warm summer day
  • Comes the wind and seems to say:
  • "Come, oh, come! and let us go
  • Where the meadows bend and blow,
  • Waving with the white-tops' snow.
  • "'Neath the hyssop-colored sky
  • 'Mid the meadows we will lie
  • Watching the white clouds roll by;
  • "While your hair my hands shall press
  • With a cooling tenderness
  • Till your grief grows less and less.
  • "Come, oh, come! and let us roam
  • Where the rock-cut waters comb
  • Flowing crystal into foam.
  • "Under trees whose trunks are brown,
  • On the banks that violets crown,
  • We will watch the fish flash down;
  • "While your ear my voice shall soothe
  • With a whisper soft and smooth
  • Till your care shall wax uncouth.
  • "Come! where forests, line on line,
  • Armies of the oak and pine,
  • Scale the hills and shout and shine.
  • "We will wander, hand in hand,
  • Ways where tall the toadstools stand,
  • Mile-stones white of Fairyland.
  • "While your eyes my lips shall kiss,
  • Dewy as a wild rose is,
  • Till they gaze on naught but bliss.
  • "On the meadows you will hear,
  • Leaning low your spirit ear,
  • Cautious footsteps drawing near.
  • "You will deem it but a bee,
  • Murmuring soft and sleepily,
  • Till your inner sight shall see
  • "'Tis a presence passing slow,
  • All its shining hair ablow,
  • Through the white-tops' tossing snow.
  • "By the waters, if you will,
  • And your inmost soul be still,
  • Melody your ears shall fill.
  • "You will deem it but the stream
  • Rippling onward in a dream,
  • Till upon your gaze shall gleam
  • "Arm of spray and throat of foam--
  • 'Tis a spirit there aroam
  • Where the radiant waters comb.
  • "In the forest, if you heed,
  • You shall hear a magic reed
  • Sow sweet notes like silver seed.
  • "You will deem your ears have heard
  • Stir of tree or song of bird,
  • Till your startled eyes are blurred
  • "By a vision, instant seen,
  • Naked gold and beryl green,
  • Glimmering bright the boughs between.
  • "Follow me! and you shall see
  • Wonder-worlds of mystery
  • That are only known to me!"
  • Thus outside my city door
  • Speaks the Wind its wildwood lore,
  • Speaks and lo! I go once more.
  • THE SPIRIT OF THE FOREST SPRING
  • Over the rocks she trails her locks,
  • Her mossy locks that drip, drip, drip;
  • Her sparkling eyes smile at the skies
  • In friendship-wise and fellowship;
  • While the gleam and glance of her countenance
  • Lull into trance the woodland places,
  • As over the rocks she trails her locks,
  • Her dripping locks that the long fern graces.
  • She pours clear ooze from her heart's cool cruse,
  • Its crystal cruse that drips, drips, drips;
  • And all the day its diamond spray
  • Is heard to play from her finger-tips;
  • And the slight soft sound makes haunted ground
  • Of the woods around that the sunlight laces,
  • As she pours clear ooze from her heart's cool cruse,
  • Its dripping cruse that no man traces.
  • She swims and swims with glimmering limbs,
  • With lucid limbs that drip, drip, drip;
  • Where beechen boughs build a leafy house
  • For her form to drowse or her feet to trip;
  • And the liquid beat of her rippling feet
  • Makes three-times sweet the forest mazes,
  • As she swims and swims with glimmering limbs,
  • With dripping limbs through the twilight's hazes.
  • Then wrapped in deeps of the wild she sleeps,
  • She whispering sleeps and drips, drips, drips;
  • Where moon and mist wreathe neck and wrist,
  • While, starry-whist, through the night she slips;
  • And the heavenly dream of her soul makes gleam
  • The falls that stream and the foam that races,
  • As wrapped in deeps of the wild she sleeps,
  • She dripping sleeps or starward gazes.
  • TO THE LEAF-CRICKET
  • I
  • Small twilight singer
  • Of dew and mist: thou ghost-gray, gossamer winger
  • Of dusk's dim glimmer,
  • How cool thy note sounds; how thy wings of shimmer
  • Vibrate, soft-sighing,
  • Meseems, for Summer that is dead or dying.
  • I stand and listen,
  • And at thy song the garden-beds, that glisten
  • With rose and lily,
  • Seem touched with sadness; and the tuberose chilly,
  • Breathing around its cold and colorless breath,
  • Fills the pale evening with wan hints of death.
  • II
  • I see thee quaintly
  • Beneath the leaf; thy shell-shaped winglets faintly--
  • As thin as spangle
  • Of cobwebbed rain--held up at airy angle;
  • I hear thy tinkle,
  • Thy fairy notes, the silvery stillness sprinkle;
  • Investing wholly
  • The moonlight with divinest melancholy:
  • Until, in seeming,
  • I see the Spirit of the Summer dreaming
  • Amid her ripened orchards, apple-strewn,
  • Her great, grave eyes fixed on the harvest-moon.
  • III
  • As dew-drops beady,
  • As mist minute, thy notes ring low and reedy:
  • The vaguest vapor
  • Of melody, now near; now, like some taper
  • Of sound, far fading--
  • Thou will-o'-wisp of music aye evading.
  • Among the bowers,
  • The fog-washed stalks of Autumn's weeds and flowers,
  • By hill and hollow,
  • I hear thy murmur and in vain I follow--
  • Thou jack-o'-lantern voice, thou elfin cry,
  • Thou dirge, that tellest Beauty she must die.
  • IV
  • And when the frantic
  • Wild winds of Autumn with the dead leaves antic;
  • And walnuts scatter
  • The mire of lanes; and dropping acorns patter
  • In grove and forest,
  • Like some frail grief, with the rude blast thou warrest,
  • Sending thy slender
  • Far cry against the gale, that, rough, untender,
  • Untouched of sorrow,
  • Sweeps thee aside, where, haply, I to-morrow
  • Shall find thee lying, tiny, cold and crushed,
  • Thy weak wings folded and thy music hushed.
  • THE OWLET
  • I
  • When dusk is drowned in drowsy dreams,
  • And slow the hues of sunset die;
  • When firefly and moth go by,
  • And in still streams the new-moon gleams,
  • A sickle in the sky;
  • Then from the hills there comes a cry,
  • The owlet's cry;
  • A shivering voice that sobs and screams,
  • That, frightened, screams:
  • "Who is it, who is it, who?
  • Who rides through the dusk and dew,
  • With a pair o' horns,
  • As thin as thorns,
  • And face a bubble blue?
  • Who, who, who!
  • Who is it, who is it, who?"
  • II
  • When night has dulled the lily's white,
  • And opened wide the primrose eyes;
  • When pale mists rise and veil the skies,
  • And 'round the height in whispering flight
  • The night-wind sounds and sighs;
  • Then in the woods again it cries,
  • The owlet cries;
  • A shivering voice that calls in fright,
  • In maundering fright:
  • "Who is it, who is it, who?
  • Who walks with a shuffling shoe,
  • 'Mid the gusty trees,
  • With a face none sees,
  • And a form as ghostly too?
  • Who, who, who!
  • Who is it, who is it, who?"
  • III
  • When midnight leans a listening ear
  • And tinkles on her insect lutes;
  • When 'mid the roots the cricket flutes,
  • And marsh and mere, now far, now near,
  • A jack-o'-lantern foots;
  • Then o'er the pool again it hoots,
  • The owlet hoots;
  • A voice that shivers as with fear,
  • That cries in fear:
  • "Who is it, who is it, who?
  • Who creeps with his glow-worm crew
  • Above the mire
  • With a corpse-light fire,
  • As only dead men do?
  • Who, who, who!
  • Who is it, who is it, who?"
  • VINE AND SYCAMORE
  • I
  • Here where a tree and its wild liana,
  • Leaning over the streamlet, grow,
  • Once a nymph, like the moon'd Diana,
  • Sat in the ages long ago.
  • Sat with a mortal with whom she had mated,
  • Sat and laughed with a mortal youth,
  • Ere he of the forest, the god who hated,
  • Saw and changed to a form uncouth....
  • II
  • Once in the woods she had heard a shepherd,
  • Heard a reed in a golden glade;
  • Followed, and clad in the skin of a leopard,
  • Found him fluting within the shade.
  • Found him sitting with bare brown shoulder,
  • Lithe and strong as a sapling oak,
  • And leaning over a mossy boulder,
  • Love in her wildwood heart awoke.
  • III
  • White she was as a dogwood flower,
  • Pinkly white as a wild-crab bloom,
  • Sweetly white as a hawtree bower
  • Full of dew and the May's perfume.
  • He who saw her above him burning,
  • Beautiful, naked, in light arrayed,
  • Deemed her Diana, and from her turning,
  • Leapt to his feet and fled afraid.
  • IV
  • Far she followed and called and pleaded,
  • Ever he fled with never a look;
  • Fled, till he came to this spot, deep-reeded,
  • Came to the bank of this forest brook.
  • Here for a moment he stopped and listened,
  • Heard in her voice her heart's despair,
  • Saw in her eyes the love that glistened,
  • Sank on her bosom and rested there.
  • V
  • Close to her beauty she strained and pressed him,
  • Held and bound him with kiss on kiss;
  • Soft with her arms and her lips caressed him,
  • Sweeter of touch than a blossom is.
  • Spoke to his heart, and with sweet persuasion
  • Mastered his soul till its fear was flown;
  • Spoke to his soul till its mortal evasion
  • Vanished, and body and soul were her own.
  • VI
  • Many a day had they met and mated,
  • Many a day by this woodland brook,
  • When he of the forest, the god who hated,
  • Came on their love and changed with a look.
  • There on the shore, while they joyed and jested,
  • He in the shadows, unseen, espied
  • Her, like the goddess Diana breasted,
  • Him, like Endymion by her side.
  • VII
  • Lo! at a word, at a sign, their folded
  • Limbs and bodies assumed new form,
  • Hers to the shape of a tree were molded,
  • His to a vine with surrounding arm....
  • So they stand with their limbs enlacing,
  • Nymph and mortal, upon this shore,
  • He forever a vine embracing
  • Her a silvery sycamore.
  • THE POET
  • He stands above all worldly schism,
  • And, gazing over life's abysm,
  • Beholds within the starry range
  • Of heaven laws of death and change,
  • That, through his soul's prophetic prism,
  • Are turned to rainbows wild and strange.
  • Through nature is his hope made surer
  • Of that ideal, his allurer,
  • By whom his life is upward drawn
  • To mount pale pinnacles of dawn,
  • 'Mid which all that is fairer, purer
  • Of love and lore it comes upon.
  • An alkahest, that makes gold metal
  • Of dross, his mind is--where one petal
  • Of one wild-rose will all outweigh
  • The piled-up facts of everyday--
  • Where commonplaces, there that settle,
  • Are changed to things of heavenly ray.
  • He climbs by steps of stars and flowers,
  • Companioned of the dreaming hours,
  • And sets his feet in pastures where
  • No merely mortal feet may fare;
  • And higher than the stars he towers
  • Though lowlier than the flowers there.
  • His comrades are his own high fancies
  • And thoughts in which his soul romances;
  • And every part of heaven or earth
  • He visits, lo, assumes new worth;
  • And touched with loftier traits and trances
  • Re-shines as with a lovelier birth.
  • He is the play, likewise the player;
  • The word that's said, also the sayer;
  • And in the books of heart and head
  • There is no thing he has not read;
  • Of time and tears he is the weigher,
  • And mouthpiece 'twixt the quick and dead.
  • He dies: but, mounting ever higher,
  • Wings Phoenix-like from out his pyre
  • Above our mortal day and night,
  • Clothed on with sempiternal light;
  • And raimented in thought's far fire
  • Flames on in everlasting flight.
  • Unseen, yet seen, on heights of visions,
  • Above all praise and world derisions,
  • His spirit and his deathless brood
  • Of dreams fare on, a multitude,
  • While on the pillar of great missions
  • His name and place are granite-hewed.
  • EVENING ON THE FARM
  • From out the hills, where twilight stands,
  • Above the shadowy pasture lands,
  • With strained and strident cry,
  • Beneath pale skies that sunset bands,
  • The bull-bats fly.
  • A cloud hangs over, strange of shape,
  • And, colored like the half-ripe grape,
  • Seems some uneven stain
  • On heaven's azure, thin as crape,
  • And blue as rain.
  • By ways, that sunset's sardonyx
  • O'erflares, and gates the farmboy clicks,
  • Through which the cattle came,
  • The mullein stalks seem giant wicks
  • Of downy flame.
  • From woods no glimmer enters in,
  • Above the streams that wandering win
  • From out the violet hills,
  • Those haunters of the dusk begin,
  • The whippoorwills.
  • Adown the dark the firefly marks
  • Its flight in golden-emerald sparks;
  • And, loosened from his chain,
  • The shaggy watchdog bounds and barks,
  • And barks again.
  • Each breeze brings scents of hill-heaped hay;
  • And now an owlet, far away,
  • Cries twice or thrice, "Twohoo;"
  • And cool dim moths of mottled gray
  • Flit through the dew.
  • The silence sounds its frog-bassoon,
  • Where on the woodland creek's lagoon,
  • Pale as a ghostly girl
  • Lost 'mid the trees, looks down the moon
  • With face of pearl.
  • Within the shed where logs, late hewed,
  • Smell forest-sweet, and chips of wood
  • Make blurs of white and brown,
  • The brood-hen cuddles her warm brood
  • Of teetering down.
  • The clattering guineas in the tree
  • Din for a time; and quietly
  • The henhouse, near the fence,
  • Sleeps, save for some brief rivalry
  • Of cocks and hens.
  • A cow-bell tinkles by the rails,
  • Where, streaming white in foaming pails,
  • Milk makes an uddery sound;
  • While overhead the black bat trails
  • Around and 'round.
  • The night is still. The slow cows chew
  • A drowsy cud. The bird that flew
  • And sang is in its nest.
  • It is the time of falling dew,
  • Of dreams and rest.
  • The brown bees sleep; and 'round the walk,
  • The garden path, from stalk to stalk
  • The bungling beetle booms,
  • Where two soft shadows stand and talk
  • Among the blooms.
  • The stars are thick: the light is dead
  • That dyed the West: and Drowsyhead,
  • Tuning his cricket-pipe,
  • Nods, and some apple, round and red,
  • Drops over ripe.
  • Now down the road, that shambles by,
  • A window, shining like an eye
  • Through climbing rose and gourd,
  • Shows where Toil sups and these things lie,
  • His heart and hoard.
  • THE BROOK
  • To it the forest tells
  • The mystery that haunts its heart and folds
  • Its form in cogitation deep, that holds
  • The shadow of each myth that dwells
  • In nature--be it Nymph or Fay or Faun--
  • And whispering of them to the dales and dells,
  • It wanders on and on.
  • To it the heaven shows
  • The secret of its soul; true images
  • Of dreams that form its aspect; and with these
  • Reflected in its countenance it goes,
  • With pictures of the skies, the dusk and dawn,
  • Within its breast, as every blossom knows,
  • For them to gaze upon.
  • Through it the world-soul sends
  • Its heart's creating pulse that beats and sings
  • The music of maternity whence springs
  • All life; and shaping earthly ends,
  • From the deep sources of the heavens drawn,
  • Planting its ways with beauty, on it wends,
  • On and forever on.
  • SUMMER NOONTIDE
  • The slender snail clings to the leaf,
  • Gray on its silvered underside:
  • And slowly, slowlier than the snail, with brief
  • Bright steps, whose ripening touch foretells the sheaf,
  • Her warm hands berry-dyed,
  • Comes down the tanned Noontide.
  • The pungent fragrance of the mint
  • And pennyroyal drench her gown,
  • That leaves long shreds of trumpet-blossom tint
  • Among the thorns, and everywhere the glint
  • Of gold and white and brown
  • Her flowery steps waft down.
  • The leaves, like hands with emerald veined,
  • Along her way try their wild best
  • To reach the jewel--whose hot hue was drained
  • From some rich rose that all the June contained--
  • The butterfly, soft pressed
  • Upon her sunny breast.
  • Her shawl, the lace-like elder bloom,
  • She hangs upon the hillside brake,
  • Smelling of warmth and of her breast's perfume,
  • And, lying in the citron-colored gloom
  • Beside the lilied lake,
  • She stares the buds awake.
  • Or, with a smile, through watery deeps
  • She leads the oaring turtle's legs;
  • Or guides the crimson fish, that swims and sleeps,
  • From pad to pad, from which the young frog leaps;
  • And to its nest's green eggs
  • The bird that pleads and begs.
  • Then 'mid the fields of unmown hay
  • She shows the bees where sweets are found;
  • And points the butterflies, at airy play,
  • And dragonflies, along the water-way,
  • Where honeyed flowers abound
  • For them to flicker 'round.
  • Or where ripe apples pelt with gold
  • Some barn--around which, coned with snow,
  • The wild-potato blooms--she mounts its old
  • Mossed roof, and through warped sides, the knots have holed,
  • Lets her long glances glow
  • Into the loft below.
  • To show the mud-wasp at its cell
  • Slenderly busy; swallows, too,
  • Packing against a beam their nest's clay shell;
  • And crouching in the dark the owl as well
  • With all her downy crew
  • Of owlets gray of hue.
  • These are her joys, and until dusk
  • Lounging she walks where reapers reap,
  • From sultry raiment shaking scents of musk,
  • Rustling the corn within its silken husk,
  • And driving down heav'n's deep
  • White herds of clouds like sheep.
  • HEAT
  • I
  • Now is it as if Spring had never been,
  • And Winter but a memory and dream,
  • Here where the Summer stands, her lap of green
  • Heaped high with bloom and beam,
  • Among her blackberry-lilies, low that lean
  • To kiss her feet; or, freckle-browed, that stare
  • Upon the dragonfly which, slimly seen,
  • Like a blue jewel flickering in her hair,
  • Sparkles above them there.
  • II
  • Knee-deep among the tepid pools the cows
  • Chew a slow cud or switch a slower tail.
  • Half-sunk in sleep beneath the beechen boughs,
  • Where thin the wood-gnats ail.
  • From bloom to bloom the languid butterflies drowse;
  • The sleepy bees make hardly any sound;
  • The only things the sunrays can arouse,
  • It seems, are two black beetles rolling 'round
  • Upon the dusty ground.
  • III
  • Within its channel glares the creek and shrinks,
  • Beneath whose rocks the furtive crawfish hides
  • In stagnant places, where the green frog blinks,
  • And water-spider glides.
  • Far hotter seems it for the bird that drinks,
  • The startled kingfisher that screams and flies;
  • Hotter and lonelier for the purple pinks
  • Of weeds that bloom, whose sultry perfumes rise
  • Stifling the swooning skies.
  • IV
  • From ragweed fallows, rye fields, heaped with sheaves,
  • From blistering rocks, no moss or lichens crust,
  • And from the road, where every hoof-stroke heaves
  • A cloud of burning dust,
  • The hotness quivers, making limp the leaves,
  • That loll like tongues of panting hounds. The heat
  • Is a wan wimple that the Summer weaves,
  • A veil, in which she wraps, as in a sheet,
  • The shriveling corn and wheat.
  • V
  • Furious, incessant in the weeds and briers
  • The sawing weed-bugs sing; and, heat-begot,
  • The grasshoppers, so many strident wires,
  • Staccato fiercely hot:
  • A lash of whirling sound that never tires,
  • The locust flails the noon, where harnessed Thirst,
  • Beside the road-spring, many a shod hoof mires,
  • Into the trough thrusts his hot head, immersed,
  • 'Round which cool bubbles burst.
  • VI
  • The sad, sweet voice of some wood-spirit who
  • Laments while watching a loved oak tree die,
  • From the deep forest comes the wood-dove's coo.
  • A long, lost, lonely cry.
  • Oh, for a breeze, a mighty wind to woo
  • The woods to stormy laughter; sow like grain
  • The world with freshness of invisible dew.
  • And pile above far, fevered hill and plain.
  • Vast bastions black with rain.
  • JULY
  • Now 'tis the time when, tall,
  • The long blue torches of the bellflower gleam
  • Among the trees; and, by the wooded stream.
  • In many a fragrant ball.
  • Blooms of the button-bush fall.
  • Let us go forth and seek
  • Woods where the wild plums redden and the beech
  • Plumps its packed burs: and, swelling, just in reach.
  • The pawpaw, emerald sleek.
  • Ripens along the creek.
  • Now 'tis the time when ways
  • Of glimmering green flaunt white the misty plumes
  • Of the black-cohosh; and through bramble glooms,
  • A blur of orange rays,
  • The butterfly-blossoms blaze.
  • Let us go forth and hear
  • The spiral music that the locusts beat,
  • And that small spray of sound, so grassy sweet,
  • Dear to a country ear,
  • The cricket's summer cheer.
  • Now golden celandine
  • Is hairy hung with silvery sacks of seeds.
  • And bugled o'er with freckled gold, like beads.
  • Beneath the fox-grape vine,
  • The jewel-weed's blossoms shine.
  • Let us go forth and see
  • The dragon- and the butterfly, like gems,
  • Spangling the sunbeams; and the clover stems,
  • Weighed down by many a bee,
  • Nodding mellifluously.
  • Now morns are full of song;
  • The catbird and the redbird and the jay
  • Upon the hilltops rouse the rosy day,
  • Who, dewy, blithe, and strong,
  • Lures their wild wings along.
  • Now noons are full of dreams;
  • The clouds of heaven and the wandering breeze
  • Follow a vision; and the flowers and trees,
  • The hills and fields and streams,
  • Are lapped in mystic gleams.
  • The nights are full of love;
  • The stars and moon take up the golden tale
  • Of the sunk sun, and passionate and pale,
  • Mixing their fires above,
  • Grow eloquent thereof.
  • Such days are like a sigh
  • That beauty heaves from a full heart of bliss:
  • Such nights are like the sweetness of a kiss
  • On lips that half deny,
  • The warm lips of July.
  • TO THE LOCUST
  • Thou pulse of hotness, who, with reed-like breast,
  • Makest meridian music, long and loud,
  • Accentuating summer!--dost thy best
  • To make the sunbeams fiercer, and to crowd
  • With lonesomeness the long, close afternoon
  • When Labor leans, swart-faced and beady browed,
  • Upon his sultry scythe--thou tangible tune
  • Of heat, whose waves incessantly arise
  • Quivering and clear beneath the cloudless skies.
  • Thou singest, and upon his haggard hills
  • Drouth yawns and rubs his heavy eyes and wakes;
  • Brushes the hot hair from his face; and fills
  • The land with death as sullenly he takes
  • Downward his dusty way: 'midst woods and fields
  • At every pool his burning thirst he slakes:
  • No grove so deep, no bank so high it shields
  • A spring from him; no creek evades his eye;
  • He needs but look and they are withered dry.
  • Thou singest, and thy song is as a spell
  • Of somnolence to charm the land with sleep;
  • A thorn of sound that pierces dale and dell,
  • Diffusing slumber over vale and steep.
  • Sleepy the forest, nodding sleepy boughs;
  • The pastures sleepy with their sleepy sheep;
  • Sleepy the creek where sleepily the cows
  • Stand knee-deep: and the very heaven seems
  • Sleepy and lost in undetermined dreams.
  • Art thou a rattle that Monotony,
  • Summer's dull nurse, old sister of slow Time,
  • Shakes for Day's peevish pleasure, who in glee
  • Takes its discordant music for sweet rhyme?
  • Or oboe that the Summer Noontide plays,
  • Sitting with Ripeness 'neath the orchard-tree,
  • Trying repeatedly the same shrill phrase,
  • Until the musky peach with drowsiness
  • Drops, and the hum of bees grows less and less?
  • YOUNG SEPTEMBER
  • I
  • With a look and a laugh where the stream was flowing,
  • September led me along the land;
  • Where the golden-rod and lobelia, glowing,
  • Seemed burning torches within her hand.
  • And faint as the thistle's or milk-weed's feather
  • I glimpsed her form through the sparkling weather.
  • II
  • Now 'twas her hand and now her hair
  • That tossed me welcome everywhere;
  • That lured me onward through the stately rooms
  • Of forest, hung and carpeted with glooms,
  • And windowed wide with azure, doored with green.
  • Through which rich glimmers of her robe were seen--
  • Now, like some deep marsh-mallow, rosy gold;
  • Now, like the great Joe-Pye-weed, fold on fold
  • Of heavy mauve; and now, like the intense
  • Massed iron-weed, a purple opulence.
  • III
  • Along the bank in a wild procession
  • Of gold and sapphire the blossoms blew;
  • And borne on the breeze came their soft confession
  • In syllables musk of honey and dew;
  • In words unheard that their lips kept saying,
  • Sweet as the lips of children praying.
  • IV
  • And so, meseemed, I heard them tell
  • How here her loving glance once fell
  • Upon this bank, and from its azure grew
  • The ageratum mist-flower's happy hue:
  • How from her kiss, as crimson as the dawn,
  • The cardinal-flow'r drew its vermilion;
  • And from her hair's blond touch th' elecampane
  • Evolved the glory of its golden rain;
  • White from her starry footsteps, redolent,
  • The aster pearled its flowery firmament.
  • UNDER THE HUNTER'S MOON
  • White from her chrysalis of cloud,
  • The moth-like moon swings upward through the night;
  • And all the bee-like stars that crowd
  • The hollow hive of heav'n wane in her light.
  • Along the distance, folds of mist
  • Hang frost-pale, ridging all the dark with gray;
  • Tinting the trees with amethyst,
  • Touching with pearl and purple every spray.
  • All night the stealthy frost and fog
  • Conspire to slay the rich-robed weeds and flowers:
  • To strip of wealth the woods, and clog
  • With piled-up gold of leaves the creek that cowers.
  • I seem to see their Spirits stand,
  • Molded of moonlight, faint of form and face,
  • Now reaching high a chilly hand
  • To pluck some walnut from its spicy place:
  • Now with fine fingers, phantom-cold,
  • Splitting the wahoo's pods of rose, and thin
  • The bittersweet's balls o' gold,
  • To show the coal-red berries packed within:
  • Now on dim threads of gossamer
  • Stringing pale pearls of moisture; necklacing
  • The flow'rs; and spreading cobweb fur,
  • Crystaled with stardew, over everything:
  • While 'neath the moon, with moon-white feet,
  • They go and, chill, a moon-soft music draw
  • From wan leaf-cricket flutes--the sweet,
  • Sad dirge of Autumn dying in the shaw.
  • RAIN IN THE WOODS
  • When on the leaves the rain persists,
  • And every gust brings showers down;
  • When all the woodland smokes with mists,
  • I take the old road out of town
  • Into the hills through which it twists.
  • I find the vale where catnip grows,
  • Where boneset blooms, with moisture bowed;
  • The vale through which the red creek flows,
  • Turbid with hill-washed clay, and loud
  • As some wild horn a hunter blows.
  • Around the root the beetle glides,
  • A living beryl; and the ant,
  • Large, agate-red, a garnet, slides
  • Beneath the rock; and every plant
  • Is roof for some frail thing that hides.
  • Like knots against the trunks of trees
  • The lichen-colored moths are pressed;
  • And, wedged in hollow blooms, the bees
  • Seem clots of pollen; in its nest
  • The wasp has crawled and lies at ease.
  • The locust harsh, that sharply saws
  • The silence of the summer noon;
  • The katydid that thinly draws
  • Its fine file o'er the bars of moon;
  • And grasshopper that drills each pause:
  • The mantis, long-clawed, furtive, lean--
  • Fierce feline of the insect hordes--
  • And dragonfly, gauze-winged and green,
  • Beneath the wild-grape's leaves and gourd's,
  • Have housed themselves and rest unseen.
  • The butterfly and forest-bird
  • Are huddled on the same gnarled bough,
  • From which, like some rain-voweled word
  • That dampness hoarsely utters now,
  • The tree-toad's voice is vaguely heard.
  • I crouch and listen; and again
  • The woods are filled with phantom forms--
  • With shapes, grotesque in mystic train,
  • That rise and reach to me cool arms
  • Of mist; the wandering wraiths of rain.
  • I see them come; fantastic, fair;
  • Chill, mushroom-colored: sky and earth
  • Grow ghostly with their floating hair
  • And trailing limbs, that have their birth
  • In wetness--fungi of the air.
  • O wraiths of rain! O ghosts of mist!
  • Still fold me, hold me, and pursue!
  • Still let my lips by yours be kissed!
  • Still draw me with your hands of dew
  • Unto the tryst, the dripping tryst.
  • IN THE LANE
  • When the hornet hangs in the hollyhock,
  • And the brown bee drones i' the rose,
  • And the west is a red-streaked four-o'-clock,
  • And summer is near its close--
  • It's--Oh, for the gate and the locust lane
  • And dusk and dew and home again!
  • When the katydid sings and the cricket cries,
  • And ghosts of the mists ascend,
  • And the evening-star is a lamp i' the skies,
  • And summer is near its end--
  • It's--Oh, for the fence and the leafy lane,
  • And the twilight peace and the tryst again!
  • When the owlet hoots in the dogwood-tree,
  • That leans to the rippling Run,
  • And the wind is a wildwood melody,
  • And summer is almost done--
  • It's--Oh, for the bridge and the bramble lane,
  • And the fragrant hush and her hands again!
  • When fields smell moist with the dewy hay,
  • And woods are cool and wan,
  • And a path for dreams is the Milky-way,
  • And summer is nearly gone--
  • It's--Oh, for the rock and the woodland lane
  • And the silence and stars and her lips again!
  • When the weight of the apples breaks down the boughs,
  • And musk-melons split with sweet,
  • And the moon is a-bloom in the Heaven's house,
  • And summer has spent its heat--
  • It's--Oh, for the lane, the trysting lane,
  • And the deep-mooned night and her love again!
  • A FOREST IDYL
  • I
  • Beneath an old beech-tree
  • They sat together,
  • Fair as a flower was she
  • Of summer weather.
  • They spoke of life and love,
  • While, through the boughs above,
  • The sunlight, like a dove,
  • Dropped many a feather.
  • II
  • And there the violet,
  • The bluet near it,
  • Made blurs of azure wet--
  • As if some spirit,
  • Or woodland dream, had gone
  • Sprinkling the earth with dawn,
  • When only Fay and Faun
  • Could see or hear it.
  • III
  • She with her young, sweet face
  • And eyes gray-beaming,
  • Made of that forest place
  • A spot for dreaming:
  • A spot for Oreads
  • To smooth their nut-brown braids,
  • For Dryads of the glades
  • To dance in, gleaming.
  • IV
  • So dim the place, so blest.
  • One had not wondered
  • Had Dian's moonéd breast
  • The deep leaves sundered,
  • And there on them awhile
  • The goddess deigned to smile.
  • While down some forest aisle
  • The far hunt thundered.
  • V
  • I deem that hour perchance
  • Was but a mirror
  • To show them Earth's romance
  • And draw them nearer:
  • A mirror where, meseems.
  • All that this Earth-life dreams,
  • All loveliness that gleams,
  • Their souls saw clearer.
  • VI
  • Beneath an old beech-tree
  • They dreamed of blisses;
  • Fair as a flower was she
  • That summer kisses:
  • They spoke of dreams and days,
  • Of love that goes and stays,
  • Of all for which life prays,
  • Ah me! and misses.
  • UNDER THE ROSE
  • He told a story to her,
  • A story old yet new--
  • And was it of the Faëry Folk
  • That dance along the dew?
  • The night was hung with silence
  • As a room is hung with cloth,
  • And soundless, through the rose-sweet hush,
  • Swooned dim the down-white moth.
  • Along the east a shimmer,
  • A tenuous breath of flame,
  • From which, as from a bath of light,
  • Nymph-like, the girl-moon came.
  • And pendent in the purple
  • Of heaven, like fireflies,
  • Bubbles of gold the great stars blew
  • From windows of the skies.
  • He told a story to her,
  • A story full of dreams--
  • And was it of the Elfin things
  • That haunt the thin moonbeams?
  • Upon the hill a thorn-tree,
  • Crooked and gnarled and gray,
  • Against the moon seemed some crutch'd hag
  • Dragging a child away.
  • And in the vale a runnel,
  • That dripped from shelf to shelf,
  • Seemed, in the night, a woodland witch
  • Who muttered to herself.
  • Along the land a zephyr,
  • Whose breath was wild perfume,
  • That seemed a sorceress who wove
  • Sweet spells of beam and bloom.
  • He told a story to her,
  • A story young yet old--
  • And was it of the mystic things
  • Men's eyes shall ne'er behold?
  • They heard the dew drip faintly
  • From out the green-cupped leaf;
  • They heard the petals of the rose
  • Unfolding from their sheaf.
  • They saw the wind light-footing
  • The waters into sheen;
  • They saw the starlight kiss to sleep
  • The blossoms on the green.
  • They heard and saw these wonders;
  • These things they saw and heard;
  • And other things within the heart
  • For which there is no word.
  • He told a story to her,
  • The story men call Love,
  • Whose echoes fill the ages past,
  • And the world ne'er tires of.
  • IN AUTUMN
  • I
  • Sunflowers wither and lilies die,
  • Poppies are pods of seeds;
  • The first red leaves on the pathway lie,
  • Like blood of a heart that bleeds.
  • Weary alway will it be to-day,
  • Weary and wan and wet;
  • Dawn and noon will the clouds hang gray,
  • And the autumn wind will sigh and say,
  • "_He comes not yet, not yet.
  • Weary alway, alway!_"
  • II
  • Hollyhocks bend all tattered and torn,
  • Marigolds all are gone;
  • The last pale rose lies all forlorn,
  • Like love that is trampled on.
  • Weary, ah me! to-night will be,
  • Weary and wild and hoar;
  • Rain and mist will blow from the sea,
  • And the wind will sob in the autumn tree,
  • "_He comes no more, no more.
  • Weary, ah me! ah me!_"
  • EPIPHANY
  • There is nothing that eases my heart so much
  • As the wind that blows from the purple hills;
  • 'Tis a hand of balsam whose healing touch
  • Unburdens my bosom of ills.
  • There is nothing that causes my soul to rejoice
  • Like the sunset flaming without a flaw:
  • 'Tis a burning bush whence God's own voice
  • Addresses my spirit with awe.
  • There is nothing that hallows my mind, meseems,
  • Like the night with its moon and its stars above;
  • 'Tis a mystical lily whose golden gleams
  • Fulfill my being with love.
  • There is nothing, no, nothing, we see and feel.
  • That speaks to our souls some beautiful thought,
  • That was not created to help us, and heal
  • Our lives that are overwrought.
  • LIFE
  • I
  • PESSIMIST
  • There is never a thing we dream or do
  • But was dreamed and done in the ages gone;
  • Everything's old; there is nothing that's new,
  • And so it will be while the world goes on.
  • The thoughts we think have been thought before;
  • The deeds we do have long been done;
  • We pride ourselves on our love and lore
  • And both are as old as the moon and sun.
  • We strive and struggle and swink and sweat,
  • And the end for each is one and the same;
  • Time and the sun and the frost and wet
  • Will wear from its pillar the greatest name.
  • No answer comes for our prayer or curse,
  • No word replies though we shriek in air;
  • Ever the taciturn universe
  • Stretches unchanged for our curse or prayer.
  • With our mind's small light in the dark we crawl,--
  • Glow-worm glimmers that creep about,--
  • Tilt the Power that shaped us, over us all
  • Poises His foot and treads us out.
  • Unasked He fashions us out of clay,
  • A little water, a little dust,
  • And then in our holes He thrusts us away,
  • With never a word, to rot and rust.
  • 'Tis a sorry play with a sorry plot,
  • This life of hate and of lust and pain,
  • Where we play our parts and are soon forgot,
  • And all that we do is done in vain.
  • II
  • OPTIMIST
  • There is never a dream but it shall come true,
  • And never a deed but was wrought by plan;
  • And life is filled with the strange and new,
  • And ever has been since the world began.
  • As mind develops and soul matures
  • These two shall parent Earth's mightier acts;
  • Love is a fact, and 'tis love endures
  • 'Though the world make wreck of all other facts.
  • Through thought alone shall our Age obtain
  • Above all Ages gone before;
  • The tribes of sloth, of brawn, not brain,
  • Are the tribes that perish, are known no more.
  • Within ourselves is a voice of Awe,
  • And a hand that points to Balanced Scales;
  • The one is Love and the other Law,
  • And their presence alone it is avails.
  • For every shadow about our way
  • There is a glory of moon and sun;
  • But the hope within us hath more of ray
  • Than the light of the sun and moon in one.
  • Behind all being a purpose lies,
  • Undeviating as God hath willed;
  • And he alone it is who dies,
  • Who leaves that purpose unfulfilled.
  • Life is an epic the Master sings,
  • Whose theme is Man, and whose music, Soul,
  • Where each is a word in the Song of Things,
  • That shall roll on while the ages roll.
  • NEVER
  • (Song)
  • Love hath no place in her,
  • Though in her bosom be
  • Love-thoughts and dreams that stir
  • Longings that know not me:
  • Love hath no place in her,
  • No place for me.
  • Never within her eyes
  • Do I the love-light see;
  • Never her soul replies
  • To the sad soul in me:
  • Never with soul and eyes
  • Speaks she to me.
  • She is a star, a rose,
  • I but a moth, a bee;
  • High in her heaven she glows,
  • Blooms far away from me:
  • She is a star, a rose,
  • Never for me.
  • Why will I think of her
  • To my heart's misery?
  • Dreaming how sweet it were
  • Had she a thought of me:
  • Why will I think of her!
  • Why, why, ah me!
  • MEETING IN THE WOODS
  • Through ferns and moss the path wound to
  • A hollow where the touchmenots
  • Swung horns of honey filled with dew;
  • And where--like foot-prints--violets blue
  • And bluets made sweet sapphire blots,
  • 'Twas there that she had passed he knew.
  • The grass, the very wilderness
  • On either side, breathed rapture of
  • Her passage: 'twas her hand or dress
  • That touched some tree--a slight caress--
  • That made the wood-birds sing above;
  • Her step that made the flowers up-press.
  • He hurried, till across his way,
  • Foam-footed, bounding through the wood,
  • A brook, like some wild girl at play,
  • Went laughing loud its roundelay;
  • And there upon its bank she stood,
  • A sunbeam clad in woodland gray.
  • And when she saw him, all her face
  • Grew to a wildrose by the stream;
  • And to his breast a moment's space
  • He gathered her; and all the place
  • Seemed conscious of some happy dream
  • Come true to add to Earth its grace.
  • Some joy, on which Heav'n was intent--
  • For which God made the world--the bliss,
  • The love, that raised her innocent
  • Pure face to his that, smiling, bent
  • And sealed confession with a kiss--
  • Life needs no other testament.
  • A MAID WHO DIED OLD
  • Frail, shrunken face, so pinched and worn,
  • That life has carved with care and doubt!
  • So weary waiting, night and morn,
  • For that which never came about!
  • Pale lamp, so utterly forlorn.
  • In which God's light at last is out.
  • Gray hair, that lies so thin and prim
  • On either side the sunken brows!
  • And soldered eyes, so deep and dim,
  • No word of man could now arouse!
  • And hollow hands, so virgin slim,
  • Forever clasped in silent vows!
  • Poor breasts! that God designed for love,
  • For baby lips to kiss and press!
  • That never felt, yet dreamed thereof,
  • The human touch, the child caress--
  • That lie like shriveled blooms above
  • The heart's long-perished happiness.
  • O withered body, Nature gave
  • For purposes of death and birth,
  • That never knew, and could but crave
  • Those things perhaps that make life worth--
  • Rest now, alas! within the grave,
  • Sad shell that served no end of Earth.
  • COMMUNICANTS
  • Who knows the things they dream, alas!
  • Or feel, who lie beneath the ground?
  • Perhaps the flowers, the leaves, and grass
  • That close them round.
  • In spring the violets may spell
  • The moods of them we know not of;
  • Or lilies sweetly syllable
  • Their thoughts of love
  • Haply, in summer, dew and scent
  • Of all they feel may be a part;
  • Each red rose be the testament
  • Of some rich heart.
  • The winds of fall be utterance,
  • Perhaps, of saddest things they say;
  • Wild leaves may word some dead romance
  • In some dim way.
  • In winter all their sleep profound
  • Through frost may speak to grass and stream;
  • The snow may be the silent sound
  • Of all they dream.
  • THE DEAD DAY
  • The West builds high a sepulchre
  • Of cloudy granite and of gold.
  • Where twilight's priestly hours inter
  • The day like some great king of old,
  • A censer, rimmed with silver fire,
  • The new moon swings above his tomb;
  • While, organ-stops of God's own choir,
  • Star after star throbs in the gloom.
  • And night draws near, the sadly sweet--
  • A nun whose face is calm and fair--
  • And kneeling at the dead day's feet
  • Her soul goes up in silent prayer.
  • In prayer, we feel through dewy gleam
  • And flowery fragrance, and--above
  • All Earth--the ecstasy and dream
  • That haunt the mystic heart of love.
  • KNIGHT-ERRANT
  • Onward he gallops through enchanted gloom.
  • The spectres of the forest, dark and dim,
  • And shadows of vast death environ him--
  • Onward he spurs victorious over doom.
  • Before his eyes that love's far fires illume--
  • Where courage sits, impregnable and grim--
  • The form and features of _her_ beauty swim,
  • Beckoning him on with looks that fears consume.
  • The thought of her distress, her lips to kiss,
  • Mails him with triple might; and so at last
  • To Lust's huge keep he comes; its giant wall,
  • Wild-towering, frowning from the precipice;
  • And through its gate, borne like a bugle blast,
  • O'er night and hell he thunders to his all.
  • THE END OF SUMMER
  • Pods are the poppies, and slim spires of pods
  • The hollyhocks; the balsam's pearly bredes
  • Of rose-stained snow are little sacs of seeds
  • Collapsing at a touch; the lote, that sods
  • The pond with green, has changed its flowers to rods
  • And discs of vesicles; and all the weeds,
  • Around the sleepy water and its reeds.
  • Are one white smoke of seeded silk that nods.
  • Summer is dead, ay me! sweet Summer's dead!
  • The sunset clouds have built her funeral pyre,
  • Through which, e'en now, runs subterranean fire:
  • While from the East, as from a garden bed,
  • Mist-vined, the Dusk lifts her broad moon--like some
  • Great golden melon--saying, "Fall has come."
  • LIGHT AND WIND
  • Where, through the leaves of myriad forest trees,
  • The daylight falls, beryl and chrysoprase,
  • The glamour and the glimmer of its rays
  • Seem visible music, tangible melodies:
  • Light that is music; music that one sees--
  • Wagnerian music--where forever sways
  • The spirit of romance, and gods and fays
  • Take form, clad on with dreams and mysteries.
  • And now the wind's transmuting necromance
  • Touches the light and makes it fall and rise,
  • Vocal, a harp of multitudinous waves
  • That speaks as ocean speaks--an utterance
  • Of far-off whispers, mermaid-murmuring sighs--
  • Pelagian, vast, deep-down in coral caves.
  • SUPERSTITION
  • In the waste places, in the dreadful night,
  • When the wood whispers like a wandering mind,
  • And silence sits and listens to the wind,
  • Or, 'mid the rocks, to some wild torrent's flight;
  • Bat-browed thou wadest with thy wisp of light
  • Among black pools the moon can never find;
  • Or, owlet-eyed, thou hootest to the blind
  • Deep darkness from some cave or haunted height.
  • He who beholds but once thy fearsome face,
  • Never again shall walk alone! but wan
  • And terrible attendants shall be his--
  • Unutterable things that have no place
  • In God or Beauty--that compel him on,
  • Against all hope, where endless horror is.
  • UNCALLED
  • As one, who, journeying westward with the sun,
  • Beholds at length from the up-towering hills,
  • Far off, a land unspeakable beauty fills,
  • Circean peaks and vales of Avalon:
  • And, sinking weary, watches, one by one,
  • The big seas beat between; and knows it skills
  • No more to try; that now, as Heaven wills,
  • This is the helpless end, that all is done:
  • So 'tis with him, whom long a vision led
  • In quest of Beauty, and who finds at last
  • She lies beyond his effort. All the waves
  • Of all the world between them: While the dead,
  • The myriad dead, who people all the Past
  • With failure, hail him from forgotten graves.
  • LOVE DESPISED
  • Can one resolve and hunt it from one's heart?
  • This love, this god and fiend, that makes a hell
  • Of many a life, in ways no tongue can tell,
  • No mind divine, nor any word impart.
  • Would not one think the slights that make hearts smart,
  • The ice of love's disdain, the wint'ry well
  • Of love's disfavor, love's own fire would quell?
  • Or school its nature, too, to its own art.
  • Why will men cringe and cry forever here
  • For that which, once obtained, may prove a curse?
  • Why not remember that, however fair,
  • Decay is wed to Beauty? That each year
  • Takes somewhat from the riches of her purse,
  • Until at last her house of pride stands bare?
  • THE DEATH OF LOVE
  • So Love is dead, the Love we knew of old!
  • And in the sorrow of our hearts' hushed halls
  • A lute lies broken and a flower falls;
  • Love's house is empty and his hearth is cold.
  • Lone in dim places, where sweet vows were told.
  • In walks grown desolate, by ruined walls,
  • Beauty decays; and on their pedestals
  • Dreams crumble, and th' immortal gods are mould.
  • Music is slain or sleeps; one voice alone,
  • One voice awakes, and like a wandering ghost
  • Haunts all the echoing chambers of the Past--
  • The voice of Memory, that stills to stone
  • The soul that hears; the mind that, utterly lost,
  • Before its beautiful presence stands aghast.
  • GERALDINE, GERALDINE
  • Geraldine, Geraldine,
  • Do you remember where
  • The willows used to screen
  • The water flowing fair?
  • The mill-stream's banks of green
  • Where first our love begun,
  • When you were seventeen,
  • And I was twenty-one?
  • Geraldine, Geraldine,
  • Do you remember how
  • From th' old bridge we would lean--
  • The bridge that's broken now--
  • To watch the minnows sheen,
  • And the ripples of the Run,
  • When you were seventeen,
  • And I was twenty-one?
  • Geraldine, Geraldine,
  • Do you remember too
  • The old beech-tree, between
  • Whose roots the wild flowers grew?
  • Where oft we met at e'en,
  • When stars were few or none,
  • When you were seventeen,
  • And I was twenty-one?
  • Geraldine, Geraldine,
  • The bark has grown around
  • The names I cut therein,
  • And the truelove-knot that bound;
  • The love-knot, clear and clean,
  • I carved when our love begun,
  • When you were seventeen,
  • And I was twenty-one?
  • Geraldine, Geraldine,
  • The roof of the farmhouse gray
  • Is fallen and mossy green;
  • Its rafters rot away:
  • The old path scarce is seen
  • Where oft our feet would run,
  • When you were seventeen,
  • And I was twenty-one.
  • Geraldine, Geraldine,
  • Through each old tree and bough
  • The lone winds cry and keen--
  • The place is haunted now,
  • With ghosts of what-has-been,
  • With dreams of love-long-done,
  • When you were seventeen,
  • And I was twenty-one.
  • Geraldine, Geraldine,
  • There, in your world of wealth,
  • There, where you move a queen,
  • Broken in heart and health,
  • Does there ever rise a scene
  • Of days, your soul would shun,
  • When you were seventeen,
  • And I was twenty-one?
  • Geraldine, Geraldine,
  • Here, 'mid the rose and rue,
  • Would God that your grave were green.
  • And I were lying too!
  • Here on the hill, I mean,
  • Where oft we laughed i' the sun,
  • When you were seventeen,
  • And I was twenty-one.
  • ALLUREMENT
  • Across the world she sends me word,
  • From gardens fair as Falerina's,
  • Now by a blossom, now a bird,
  • To come to her, who long has lured
  • With magic sweeter than Alcina's.
  • I know not what her word may mean,
  • I know not what may mean the voices
  • She sends as messengers serene,
  • That through the silvery silence lean,
  • To tell me where her heart rejoices.
  • But I must go! I must away!
  • Must take the path that is appointed!
  • God grant I find her realm some day!
  • Where, by her love, as by a ray,
  • My soul shall be anointed.
  • BLACK VESPER'S PAGEANTS.
  • The day, all fierce with carmine, turns
  • An Indian face towards Earth and dies;
  • The west, like some gaunt vase, inurns
  • Its ashes under smouldering skies,
  • Athwart whose bowl one red cloud streams,
  • Strange as a shape some Aztec dreams.
  • Now shadows mass above the world,
  • And night comes on with wind and rain;
  • The mulberry-colored leaves are hurled
  • Like frantic hands against the pane.
  • And through the forests, bending low,
  • Night stalks like some gigantic woe.
  • In hollows where the thistle shakes
  • A hoar bloom like a witch's-light,
  • From weed and flower the rain-wind rakes
  • Dead sweetness--as a wildman might,
  • From out the leaves, the woods among,
  • Dig some dead woman, fair and young.
  • Now let me walk the woodland ways,
  • Alone! except for thoughts, that are
  • Akin to such wild nights and days;
  • A portion of the storm that far
  • Fills Heaven and Earth tumultuously,
  • And my own soul with ecstasy.
  • OTHER VOLUMES
  • BY
  • MADISON CAWEIN
  • THE GARDEN OF DREAMS
  • Printed on hand-made paper; bound in watered silk;
  • only a few copies remaining; price, $1.25 (net)
  • WEEDS BY THE WALL
  • Tastefully bound in silk cloth; price, $1.25
  • Sent on receipt of price to any address by
  • JOHN P. MORTON & COMPANY
  • PUBLISHERS
  • LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY.
  • WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS, in the _North American Review_ for January, 1902.
  • "One never praises an author for certain things without afterward
  • doubting if they were the characteristic things, or whether just the
  • reverse might not be said. Praise is, in fact, a delicate business, and
  • I, who am rather fond of dealing in it, never feel quite safe. Not only
  • is it questionable at the moment, but the later behavior of the author
  • is sometimes such that one is sorry not to have made it blame. It is
  • always with a shrinking, which I try to hide from the public, that I
  • take up the fresh venture of a poet whom I have once bet on. But there
  • is a joy when I find that I have not lost my wager, which is full
  • compensation for the anxiety suffered. This joy has lately been mine in
  • the latest little book of Mr. Madison Cawein, whose work I long ago
  • confessed my pleasure in. I am not sure that he has transcended the
  • limits which he then seemed to give himself as the lover, the prophet,
  • of beauty in the woods and waters and skies of the southern Mid-West. I
  • do not know that he need have done more than unlock the riches of
  • emotion within these limits. What I am sure of is that in 'Weeds by the
  • Wall' he has more deeply charmed me with an art perfected from that I
  • felt in 'Blooms of the Berry' ten or fifteen years since. Many little
  • books of his have come (I hope not also gone) between the first and
  • last, and none of them has failed to make me glad of his work; and now,
  • again, I am finding the same impassioned moods in the same impassive
  • presences. To my knowledge, no such nature poems have been written
  • within the time since Mr. Cawein began to write as his are, or from such
  • an intimacy with the 'various language' which nature speaks. There are
  • other good poems in the book, poems which would have made reputes in the
  • eighteenth century, and which it would be a shame not to own good in the
  • twentieth; but those which speak for 'The Cricket,' 'A Twilight Moth,'
  • 'The Grasshopper,' 'The Tree-Toad,' 'The Screech Owl,' 'The Chipmunk,'
  • 'Drouth,' 'Before the Rain,' and the like, are in a voice which
  • interprets the very soul of what we call the inarticulate things, though
  • they seem to have enunciated themselves so distinctly to this poet. It
  • is cheap to note his increasing control of his affluent imagery and the
  • growing mastery that makes him so fine an artist. These things were to
  • be expected from his early poems, but what makes one think he will go
  • far and long, and outlive both praise and blame, is the blending of a
  • sense of the Kentucky civilization in such a poem as 'Feud.'...
  • Civilization may not be quite the word for the condition of things
  • suggested here, but there can be no doubt of the dramatic and the
  • graphic power that suggests it, and that imparts a personal sense of the
  • tragic squalor, the sultry drouth, the forlorn wickedness of it all. By
  • such a way as this lies Mr. Cawein's hope of rise from nature up to man,
  • if it is up; and also, as I perceive too late, lies confusion for the
  • critic who said that the poet does not transcend the limits he once
  • seemed to give himself."
  • * * * * *
  • TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: Page 76 "wickednsse" changed to "wickedness" (the
  • forlorn wickedness of it all.)
  • End of Project Gutenberg's A Voice on the Wind, by Madison Julius Cawein
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