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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by Madison Cawein
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  • Title: Poems
  • Author: Madison Cawein
  • Posting Date: February 16, 2013 [EBook #7796]
  • Release Date: March, 2005
  • First Posted: May 17, 2003
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS ***
  • Produced by Eric Eldred, S.R. Ellison, and the Online
  • Distributed Proofreading Team
  • POEMS
  • BY
  • MADISON CAWEIN
  • (SELECTED BY THE AUTHOR)
  • WITH
  • A FOREWORD BY WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS
  • 1911
  • INTRODUCTORY NOTE
  • The verses composing this volume have been selected by the author almost
  • entirely from the five-volume edition of his poems published by the
  • Bobbs-Merrill Company in 1907. A number have been included from the three
  • or four volumes which have been published since the appearance of the
  • Collected Poems; namely, three poems from the volume entitled "Nature
  • Notes and Impressions," E. P. Button & Co., New York; one poem from "The
  • Giant and the Star," Small, Maynard & Co., Boston; Section VII and part of
  • Section VIII of "An Ode" written in commemoration of the founding of the
  • Massachusetts Bay Colony, and published by John P. Morton & Co.,
  • Louisville, Ky.; some five or six poems from "New Poems," published in
  • London by Mr. Grant Richards in 1909; and three or four selections from
  • the volume of selections entitled "Kentucky Poems," compiled by Mr. Edmund
  • Gosse and published in London by Mr. Grant Richards in 19O2.
  • Acknowledgment and thanks for permission to reprint the various poems
  • included in this volume are herewith made to the different publishers.
  • The two poems, "in Arcady" and "The Black Knight" are new and are
  • published here for the first time.
  • In making the selections for the present book Mr. Cawein has endeavored to
  • cover the entire field of his poetical labors, which extends over a
  • quarter of a century. With the exception of his dramatic work, as
  • witnessed by one volume only, "The Shadow Garden," a book of plays four in
  • number, published in 1910, the selection herewith presented by us is, in
  • our opinion, representative of the author's poetical work.
  • CONTENTS
  • The Poetry of Madison Cawein.
  • Hymn to Spiritual Desire.
  • Beautiful-Bosomed, O Night.
  • Discovery.
  • O Maytime Woods.
  • The Redbird.
  • A Niello.
  • In May.
  • Aubade.
  • Apocalypse.
  • Penetralia.
  • Elusion.
  • Womanhood.
  • The Idyll of the Standing-Stone.
  • NoĆ«ra.
  • The Old Spring.
  • A Dreamer of Dreams.
  • Deep in the Forest
  • I. Spring on the Hills.
  • II. Moss and Fern.
  • III. The Thorn Tree.
  • IV. The Hamadryad.
  • Preludes.
  • May.
  • What Little Things.
  • In the Shadow of the Beeches.
  • Unrequited.
  • The Solitary.
  • A Twilight Moth.
  • The Old Farm.
  • The Whippoorwill.
  • Revealment.
  • Hepaticas.
  • The Wind of Spring.
  • The Catbird.
  • A Woodland Grave.
  • Sunset Dreams.
  • The Old Byway.
  • "Below the Sunset's Range of Rose".
  • Music of Summer.
  • Midsummer.
  • The Rain-Crow.
  • Field and Forest Call.
  • Old Homes.
  • The Forest Way.
  • Sunset and Storm.
  • Quiet Lanes.
  • One who loved Nature.
  • Garden Gossip.
  • Assumption.
  • Senorita.
  • Overseas.
  • Problems.
  • To a Windflower.
  • Voyagers.
  • The Spell.
  • Uncertainty.
  • In the Wood.
  • Since Then.
  • Dusk in the Woods.
  • Paths.
  • The Quest.
  • The Garden of Dreams.
  • The Path to Faery.
  • There are Faeries.
  • The Spirit of the Forest Spring.
  • In a Garden.
  • In the Lane.
  • The Window on the Hill.
  • The Picture.
  • Moly.
  • Poppy and Mandragora.
  • A Road Song.
  • Phantoms.
  • Intimations of the Beautiful.
  • October.
  • Friends.
  • Comradery.
  • Bare Boughs.
  • Days and Days.
  • Autumn Sorrow.
  • The Tree-Toad.
  • The Chipmunk.
  • The Wild Iris.
  • Drouth.
  • Rain.
  • At Sunset.
  • The Leaf-Cricket.
  • The Wind of Winter.
  • The Owlet.
  • Evening on the Farm.
  • The Locust.
  • The Dead Day.
  • The Old Water-Mill.
  • Argonauts.
  • "The Morn that breaks its Heart of Gold".
  • A Voice on the Wind.
  • Requiem.
  • Lynchers.
  • The Parting.
  • Feud.
  • Ku Klux.
  • Eidolons.
  • The Man Hunt.
  • My Romance.
  • A Maid who died Old.
  • Ballad of Low-Lie-Down.
  • Romance.
  • Amadis and Oriana.
  • The Rosicrucian.
  • The Age of Gold.
  • Beauty and Art.
  • The Sea Spirit.
  • Gargaphie.
  • The Dead Oread.
  • The Faun.
  • The Paphian Venus.
  • Oriental Romance.
  • The Mameluke.
  • The Slave.
  • The Portrait.
  • The Black Knight.
  • In Arcady.
  • Prototypes.
  • March.
  • Dusk.
  • The Winds.
  • Light and Wind.
  • Enchantment.
  • Abandoned.
  • After Long Grief.
  • Mendicants.
  • The End of Summer.
  • November.
  • The Death of Love.
  • Unanswered.
  • The Swashbuckler.
  • Old Sir John.
  • Uncalled.
  • THE POETRY OF MADISON CAWEIN
  • When a poet begins writing, and we begin liking his work, we own willingly
  • enough that we have not, and cannot have, got the compass of his talent.
  • We must wait till he has written more, and we have learned to like him
  • more, and even then we should hesitate his definition, from all that he
  • has done, if we did not very commonly qualify ourselves from the latest
  • thing he has done. Between the earliest thing and the latest thing there
  • may have been a hundred different things, and in his swan-long life of a
  • singer there would probably be a hundred yet, and all different. But we
  • take the latest as if it summed him up in motive and range and tendency.
  • Many parts of his work offer themselves in confirmation of our judgment,
  • while those which might impeach it shrink away and hide themselves, and
  • leave us to our precipitation, our catastrophe.
  • It was surely nothing less than by a catastrophe that I should have been
  • so betrayed in the volumes of Mr. Cawein's verse which reached me last
  • before the volume of his collected poems.... I had read his poetry and
  • loved it from the beginning, and in each successive expression of it, I
  • had delighted in its expanding and maturing beauty. I believe I had not
  • failed to own its compass, and when--
  • "He touched the tender stops of various quills,"
  • I had responded to every note of the changing music. I did not always
  • respond audibly either in public or in private, for it seemed to me that
  • so old a friend might fairly rest on the laurels he had helped bestow. But
  • when that last volume came, I said to myself, "This applausive silence has
  • gone on long enough. It is time to break it with open appreciation.
  • Still," I said, "I must guard against too great appreciation; I must mix
  • in a little depreciation, to show that I have read attentively,
  • critically, authoritatively." So I applied myself to the cheapest and
  • easiest means of depreciation, and asked, "Why do you always write Nature
  • poems? Why not Human Nature poems?" or the like. But in seizing upon an
  • objection so obvious that I ought to have known it was superficial, I had
  • wronged a poet, who had never done me harm, but only good, in the very
  • terms and conditions of his being a poet. I had not stayed to see that his
  • nature poetry was instinct with human poetry, with _his_ human poetry,
  • with mine, with yours. I had made his reproach what ought to have been his
  • finest praise, what is always the praise of poetry when it is not
  • artificial and formal. I ought to have said, as I had seen, that not one
  • of his lovely landscapes in which I could discover no human figure, but
  • thrilled with a human presence penetrating to it from his most sensitive
  • and subtle spirit until it was all but painfully alive with memories, with
  • regrets, with longings, with hopes, with all that from time to time
  • mutably constitutes us men and women, and yet keeps us children. He has
  • the gift, in a measure that I do not think surpassed in any poet, of
  • touching some smallest or commonest thing in nature, and making it live
  • from the manifold associations in which we have our being, and glow
  • thereafter with an inextinguishable beauty. His felicities do not seem
  • sought; rather they seem to seek him, and to surprise him with the delight
  • they impart through him. He has the inspiration of the right word, and the
  • courage of it, so that though in the first instant you may be challenged,
  • you may be revolted, by something that you might have thought uncouth, you
  • are presently overcome by the happy bravery of it, and gladly recognize
  • that no other word of those verbal saints or aristocrats, dedicated to the
  • worship or service of beauty, would at all so well have conveyed the sense
  • of it as this or that plebeian.
  • If I began indulging myself in the pleasure of quotation, or the delight
  • of giving proofs of what I say, I should soon and far transcend the modest
  • bounds which the editor has set my paper. But the reader may take it from
  • me that no other poet, not even of the great Elizabethan range, can
  • outword this poet when it comes to choosing some epithet fresh from the
  • earth or air, and with the morning sun or light upon it, for an emotion or
  • experience in which the race renews its youth from generation to
  • generation. He is of the kind of Keats and Shelley and Wordsworth and
  • Coleridge, in that truth to observance and experience of nature and the
  • joyous expression of it, which are the dominant characteristics of his
  • art. It is imaginable that the thinness of the social life in the Middle
  • West threw the poet upon the communion with the fields and woods, the days
  • and nights, the changing seasons, in which another great nature poet of
  • ours declares they "speak in various language." But nothing could be
  • farther from the didactic mood in which "communion with the various forms"
  • of nature casts the Puritanic soul of Bryant, than the mood in which this
  • German-blooded, Kentucky-born poet, who keeps throughout his song the
  • sense of a perpetual and inalienable youth, with a spirit as pagan as that
  • which breathes from Greek sculpture--but happily not more pagan. Most
  • modern poets who are antique are rather over-Hellenic, in their wish not
  • to be English or French, but there is nothing voluntary in Mr. Cawein's
  • naturalization in the older world of myth and fable; he is too sincerely
  • and solely a poet to be a _posseur;_ he has his eyes everywhere except on
  • the spectator, and his affair is to report the beauty that he sees, as if
  • there were no one by to hear.
  • An interesting and charming trait of his poetry is its constant theme of
  • youth and its limit within the range that the emotions and aspirations of
  • youth take. He might indeed be called the poet of youth if he resented
  • being called the poet of nature; but the poet of youth, be it understood,
  • of vague regrets, of "tears, idle tears," of "long, long thoughts," for
  • that is the real youth, and not the youth of the supposed hilarity, the
  • attributive recklessness, the daring hopes. Perhaps there is some such
  • youth as this, but it has not its home in the breast of any young poet,
  • and he rarely utters it; at best he is of a light melancholy, a smiling
  • wistfulness, and upon the whole, October is more to his mind than May.
  • In Mr. Cawein's work, therefore, what is not the expression of the world
  • we vainly and rashly call the inanimate world, is the hardly more
  • dramatized, and not more enchantingly imagined story of lovers, rather
  • unhappy lovers. He finds his own in this sort far and near; in classic
  • Greece, in heroic England, in romantic Germany, where the blue flower
  • blows, but not less in beautiful and familiar Kentucky, where the blue
  • grass shows itself equally the emblem of poetry, and the moldering log in
  • the cabin wall or the woodland path is of the same poetic value as the
  • marble of the ruined temple or the stone of the crumbling castle. His
  • singularly creative fancy breathes a soul into every scene; his touch
  • leaves everything that was dull to the sense before glowing in the light
  • of joyful recognition. He classifies his poems by different names, and
  • they are of different themes, but they are after all of that unity which I
  • have been trying, all too shirkingly, to suggest. One, for instance, is
  • the pathetic story which tells itself in the lyrical eclogue "One Day and
  • Another." It is the conversation, prolonged from meeting to meeting,
  • between two lovers whom death parts; but who recurrently find themselves
  • and each other in the gardens and the woods, and on the waters which they
  • tell each other of and together delight in. The effect is that which is
  • truest to youth and love, for these transmutations of emotion form the
  • disguise of self which makes passion tolerable; but mechanically the
  • result is a series of nature poems. More genuinely dramatic are such
  • pieces as "The Feud," "Ku Klux," and "The Lynchers," three out of many;
  • but one which I value more because it is worthy of Wordsworth, or of
  • Tennyson in a Wordsworthian mood, is "The Old Mill," where, with all the
  • wonted charm of his landscape art, Mr. Cawein gives us a strongly local
  • and novel piece of character painting.
  • I deny myself with increasing reluctance the pleasure of quoting the
  • stanzas, the verses, the phrases, the epithets, which lure me by scores
  • and hundreds in his poems. It must suffice me to say that I do not know
  • any poem of his which has not some such a felicity; I do not know any poem
  • of his which is not worth reading, at least the first time, and often the
  • second and the third time, and so on as often as you have the chance of
  • recurring to it. Some disappoint and others delight more than others; but
  • there is none but in greater or less measure has the witchery native to
  • the poet, and his place and his period.
  • It is only in order of his later time that I would put Mr. Cawein first
  • among those Midwestern poets, of whom he is the youngest. Poetry in the
  • Middle West has had its development in which it was eclipsed by the
  • splendor, transitory if not vain, of the California school. But it is
  • deeply rooted in the life of the region, and is as true to its origins as
  • any faithful portraiture of the Midwestern landscape could be; you could
  • not mistake the source of the poem or the picture. In a certain tenderness
  • of light and coloring, the poems would recall the mellowed masterpieces of
  • the older literatures rather than those of the New England school, where
  • conscience dwells almost rebukingly with beauty....
  • W. D. HOWELLS.
  • From _The North American Review_. Copyright, 1908, by the North American
  • Review Publishing Company.
  • POEMS
  • HYMN TO SPIRITUAL DESIRE
  • I
  • Mother of visions, with lineaments dulcet as numbers
  • Breathed on the eyelids of Love by music that slumbers,
  • Secretly, sweetly, O presence of fire and snow,
  • Thou comest mysterious,
  • In beauty imperious,
  • Clad on with dreams and the light of no world that we know:
  • Deep to my innermost soul am I shaken,
  • Helplessly shaken and tossed,
  • And of thy tyrannous yearnings so utterly taken,
  • My lips, unsatisfied, thirst;
  • Mine eyes are accurst
  • With longings for visions that far in the night are forsaken;
  • And mine ears, in listening lost,
  • Yearn, waiting the note of a chord that will never awaken.
  • II
  • Like palpable music thou comest, like moonlight; and far,--
  • Resonant bar upon bar,--
  • The vibrating lyre
  • Of the spirit responds with melodious fire,
  • As thy fluttering fingers now grasp it and ardently shake,
  • With laughter and ache,
  • The chords of existence, the instrument star-sprung,
  • Whose frame is of clay, so wonderfully molded of mire.
  • III
  • Vested with vanquishment, come, O Desire, Desire!
  • Breathe in this harp of my soul the audible angel of Love!
  • Make of my heart an Israfel burning above,
  • A lute for the music of God, that lips, which are mortal, but stammer!
  • Smite every rapturous wire
  • With golden delirium, rebellion and silvery clamor,
  • Crying--"Awake! awake!
  • Too long hast thou slumbered! too far from the regions of glamour
  • With its mountains of magic, its fountains of faery, the spar-sprung,
  • Hast thou wandered away, O Heart!"
  • Come, oh, come and partake
  • Of necromance banquets of Beauty; and slake
  • Thy thirst in the waters of Art,
  • That are drawn from the streams
  • Of love and of dreams.
  • IV
  • "Come, oh, come!
  • No longer shall language be dumb!
  • Thy vision shall grasp--
  • As one doth the glittering hasp
  • Of a sword made splendid with gems and with gold--
  • The wonder and richness of life, not anguish and hate of it merely.
  • And out of the stark
  • Eternity, awful and dark,
  • Immensity silent and cold,--
  • Universe-shaking as trumpets, or cymbaling metals,
  • Imperious; yet pensive and pearly
  • And soft as the rosy unfolding of petals,
  • Or crumbling aroma of blossoms that wither too early,--
  • The majestic music of God, where He plays
  • On the organ, eternal and vast, of eons and days."
  • BEAUTIFUL-BOSOMED, O NIGHT
  • I
  • Beautiful-bosomed, O Night, in thy noon
  • Move with majesty onward! soaring, as lightly
  • As a singer may soar the notes of an exquisite tune,
  • The stars and the moon
  • Through the clerestories high of the heaven, the firmament's halls:
  • Under whose sapphirine walls,
  • June, hesperian June,
  • Robed in divinity wanders. Daily and nightly
  • The turquoise touch of her robe, that the violets star,
  • The silvery fall of her feet, that lilies are,
  • Fill the land with languorous light and perfume.--
  • Is it the melody mute of burgeoning leaf and of bloom?
  • The music of Nature, that silently shapes in the gloom
  • Immaterial hosts
  • Of spirits that have the flowers and leaves in their keep,
  • Whom I hear, whom I hear?
  • With their sighs of silver and pearl?
  • Invisible ghosts,--
  • Each sigh a shadowy girl,--
  • Who whisper in leaves and glimmer in blossoms and hover
  • In color and fragrance and loveliness, breathed from the deep
  • World-soul of the mother,
  • Nature; who over and over,--
  • Both sweetheart and lover,--
  • Goes singing her songs from one sweet month to the other.
  • II
  • Lo! 'tis her songs that appear, appear,
  • In forest and field, on hill-land and lea,
  • As visible harmony,
  • Materialized melody,
  • Crystallized beauty, that out of the atmosphere
  • Utters itself, in wonder and mystery,
  • Peopling with glimmering essence the hyaline far and the near....
  • III
  • Behold how it sprouts from the grass and blossoms from flower and tree!
  • In waves of diaphanous moonlight and mist,
  • In fugue upon fugue of gold and of amethyst,
  • Around me, above me it spirals; now slower, now faster,
  • Like symphonies born of the thought of a musical master.--
  • O music of Earth! O God, who the music inspired!
  • Let me breathe of the life of thy breath!
  • And so be fulfilled and attired
  • In resurrection, triumphant o'er time and o'er death!
  • DISCOVERY
  • What is it now that I shall seek
  • Where woods dip downward, in the hills?--
  • A mossy nook, a ferny creek,
  • And May among the daffodils.
  • Or in the valley's vistaed glow,
  • Past rocks of terraced trumpet vines,
  • Shall I behold her coming slow,
  • Sweet May, among the columbines?
  • With redbud cheeks and bluet eyes,
  • Big eyes, the homes of happiness,
  • To meet me with the old surprise,
  • Her wild-rose hair all bonnetless.
  • Who waits for me, where, note for note,
  • The birds make glad the forest trees?--
  • A dogwood blossom at her throat,
  • My May among th' anemones.
  • As sweetheart breezes kiss the blooms,
  • And dews caress the moon's pale beams,
  • My soul shall drink her lips' perfumes,
  • And know the magic of her dreams.
  • O MAYTIME WOODS!
  • From the idyll "Wild Thorn and Lily"
  • O Maytime woods! O Maytime lanes and hours!
  • And stars, that knew how often there at night
  • Beside the path, where woodbine odors blew
  • Between the drowsy eyelids of the dusk,--
  • When, like a great, white, pearly moth, the moon
  • Hung silvering long windows of your room,--
  • I stood among the shrubs! The dark house slept.
  • I watched and waited for--I know not what!--
  • Some tremor of your gown: a velvet leaf's
  • Unfolding to caresses of the Spring:
  • The rustle of your footsteps: or the dew
  • Syllabling avowal on a tulip's lips
  • Of odorous scarlet: or the whispered word
  • Of something lovelier than new leaf or rose--
  • The word young lips half murmur in a dream:
  • Serene with sleep, light visions weigh her eyes:
  • And underneath her window blooms a quince.
  • The night is a sultana who doth rise
  • In slippered caution, to admit a prince,
  • Love, who her eunuchs and her lord defies.
  • Are these her dreams? or is it that the breeze
  • Pelts me with petals of the quince, and lifts
  • The Balm-o'-Gilead buds? and seems to squeeze
  • Aroma on aroma through sweet rifts
  • Of Eden, dripping through the rainy trees.
  • Along the path the buckeye trees begin
  • To heap their hills of blossoms.--Oh, that they
  • Were Romeo ladders, whereby I might win
  • Her chamber's sanctity!--where dreams must pray
  • About her soul!--That I might enter in!--
  • A dream,--and see the balsam scent erase
  • Its dim intrusion; and the starry night
  • Conclude majestic pomp; the virgin grace
  • Of every bud abashed before the white,
  • Pure passion-flower of her sleeping face.
  • THE REDBIRD
  • From "Wild Thorn and Lily"
  • Among the white haw-blossoms, where the creek
  • Droned under drifts of dogwood and of haw,
  • The redbird, like a crimson blossom blown
  • Against the snow-white bosom of the Spring,
  • The chaste confusion of her lawny breast,
  • Sang on, prophetic of serener days,
  • As confident as June's completer hours.
  • And I stood listening like a hind, who hears
  • A wood nymph breathing in a forest flute
  • Among the beech-boles of myth-haunted ways:
  • And when it ceased, the memory of the air
  • Blew like a syrinx in my brain: I made
  • A lyric of the notes that men might know:
  • He flies with flirt and fluting--
  • As flies a crimson star
  • From flaming star-beds shooting--
  • From where the roses are.
  • Wings past and sings; and seven
  • Notes, wild as fragrance is,--
  • That turn to flame in heaven,--
  • Float round him full of bliss.
  • He sings; each burning feather
  • Thrills, throbbing at his throat;
  • A song of firefly weather,
  • And of a glowworm boat:
  • Of Elfland and a princess
  • Who, born of a perfume,
  • His music rocks,--where winces
  • That rosebud's cradled bloom.
  • No bird sings half so airy,
  • No bird of dusk or dawn,
  • Thou masking King of Faery!
  • Thou red-crowned Oberon!
  • A NIƋLLO
  • I
  • It is not early spring and yet
  • Of bloodroot blooms along the stream,
  • And blotted banks of violet,
  • My heart will dream.
  • Is it because the windflower apes
  • The beauty that was once her brow,
  • That the white memory of it shapes
  • The April now?
  • Because the wild-rose wears the blush
  • That once made sweet her maidenhood,
  • Its thought makes June of barren bush
  • And empty wood?
  • And then I think how young she died--
  • Straight, barren Death stalks down the trees,
  • The hard-eyed Hours by his side,
  • That kill and freeze.
  • II
  • When orchards are in bloom again
  • My heart will bound, my blood will beat,
  • To hear the redbird so repeat,
  • On boughs of rosy stain,
  • His blithe, loud song,--like some far strain
  • From out the past,--among the bloom,--
  • (Where bee and wasp and hornet boom)--
  • Fresh, redolent of rain.
  • When orchards are in bloom once more,
  • Invasions of lost dreams will draw
  • My feet, like some insistent law,
  • Through blossoms to her door:
  • In dreams I'll ask her, as before,
  • To let me help her at the well;
  • And fill her pail; and long to tell
  • My love as once of yore.
  • I shall not speak until we quit
  • The farm-gate, leading to the lane
  • And orchard, all in bloom again,
  • Mid which the bluebirds sit
  • And sing; and through whose blossoms flit
  • The catbirds crying while they fly:
  • Then tenderly I'll speak, and try
  • To tell her all of it.
  • And in my dream again she'll place
  • Her hand in mine, as oft before,--
  • When orchards are in bloom once more,--
  • With all her young-girl grace:
  • And we shall tarry till a trace
  • Of sunset dyes the heav'ns; and then--
  • We'll part; and, parting, I again
  • Shall bend and kiss her face.
  • And homeward, singing, I shall go
  • Along the cricket-chirring ways,
  • While sunset, one long crimson blaze
  • Of orchards, lingers low:
  • And my dead youth again I'll know,
  • And all her love, when spring is here--
  • Whose memory holds me many a year,
  • Whose love still haunts me so!
  • III
  • I would not die when Springtime lifts
  • The white world to her maiden mouth,
  • And heaps its cradle with gay gifts,
  • Breeze-blown from out the singing South:
  • Too full of life and loves that cling;
  • Too heedless of all mortal woe,
  • The young, unsympathetic Spring,
  • That Death should never know.
  • I would not die when Summer shakes
  • Her daisied locks below her hips,
  • And naked as a star that takes
  • A cloud, into the silence slips:
  • Too rich is Summer; poor in needs;
  • In egotism of loveliness
  • Her pomp goes by, and never heeds
  • One life the more or less.
  • But I would die when Autumn goes,
  • The dark rain dripping from her hair,
  • Through forests where the wild wind blows
  • Death and the red wreck everywhere:
  • Sweet as love's last farewells and tears
  • To fall asleep when skies are gray,
  • In the old autumn of my years,
  • Like a dead leaf borne far away.
  • IN MAY
  • I
  • When you and I in the hills went Maying,
  • You and I in the bright May weather,
  • The birds, that sang on the boughs together,
  • There in the green of the woods, kept saying
  • All that my heart was saying low,
  • "I love you! love you!" soft and low,--
  • And did you know?
  • When you and I in the hills went Maying.
  • II
  • There where the brook on its rocks went winking,
  • There by its banks where the May had led us,
  • Flowers, that bloomed in the woods and meadows,
  • Azure and gold at our feet, kept thinking
  • All that my soul was thinking there,
  • "I love you! love you!" softly there--
  • And did you care?
  • There where the brook on its rocks went winking.
  • III
  • Whatever befalls through fate's compelling,
  • Should our paths unite or our pathways sever,
  • In the Mays to come I shall feel forever
  • The wildflowers thinking, the wild birds telling,
  • In words as soft as the falling dew,
  • The love that I keep here still for you,
  • Both deep and true,
  • Whatever befalls through fate's compelling.
  • AUBADE
  • Awake! the dawn is on the hills!
  • Behold, at her cool throat a rose,
  • Blue-eyed and beautiful she goes,
  • Leaving her steps in daffodils.--
  • Awake! arise! and let me see
  • Thine eyes, whose deeps epitomize
  • All dawns that were or are to be,
  • O love, all Heaven in thine eyes!--
  • Awake! arise! come down to me!
  • Behold! the dawn is up: behold!
  • How all the birds around her float,
  • Wild rills of music, note on note,
  • Spilling the air with mellow gold.--
  • Arise! awake! and, drawing near,
  • Let me but hear thee and rejoice!
  • Thou, who keep'st captive, sweet and clear,
  • All song, O love, within thy voice!
  • Arise! awake! and let me hear!
  • See, where she comes, with limbs of day,
  • The dawn! with wild-rose hands and feet,
  • Within whose veins the sunbeams beat,
  • And laughters meet of wind and ray.
  • Arise! come down! and, heart to heart,
  • Love, let me clasp in thee all these--
  • The sunbeam, of which thou art part,
  • And all the rapture of the breeze!--
  • Arise! come down! loved that thou art!
  • APOCALYPSE
  • Before I found her I had found
  • Within my heart, as in a brook,
  • Reflections of her: now a sound
  • Of imaged beauty; now a look.
  • So when I found her, gazing in
  • Those Bibles of her eyes, above
  • All earth, I read no word of sin;
  • Their holy chapters all were love.
  • I read them through. I read and saw
  • The soul impatient of the sod--
  • Her soul, that through her eyes did draw
  • Mine--to the higher love of God.
  • PENETRALIA
  • I am a part of all you see
  • In Nature; part of all you feel:
  • I am the impact of the bee
  • Upon the blossom; in the tree
  • I am the sap,--that shall reveal
  • The leaf, the bloom,--that flows and flutes
  • Up from the darkness through its roots.
  • I am the vermeil of the rose,
  • The perfume breathing in its veins;
  • The gold within the mist that glows
  • Along the west and overflows
  • With light the heaven; the dew that rains
  • Its freshness down and strings with spheres
  • Of wet the webs and oaten ears.
  • I am the egg that folds the bird;
  • The song that beaks and breaks its shell;
  • The laughter and the wandering word
  • The water says; and, dimly heard,
  • The music of the blossom's bell
  • When soft winds swing it; and the sound
  • Of grass slow-creeping o'er the ground.
  • I am the warmth, the honey-scent
  • That throats with spice each lily-bud
  • That opens, white with wonderment,
  • Beneath the moon; or, downward bent,
  • Sleeps with a moth beneath its hood:
  • I am the dream that haunts it too,
  • That crystallizes into dew.
  • I am the seed within the pod;
  • The worm within its closed cocoon:
  • The wings within the circling clod,
  • The germ, that gropes through soil and sod
  • To beauty, radiant in the noon:
  • I am all these, behold! and more--
  • I am the love at the world-heart's core.
  • ELUSION
  • I
  • My soul goes out to her who says,
  • "Come, follow me and cast off care!"
  • Then tosses back her sun-bright hair,
  • And like a flower before me sways
  • Between the green leaves and my gaze:
  • This creature like a girl, who smiles
  • Into my eyes and softly lays
  • Her hand in mine and leads me miles,
  • Long miles of haunted forest ways.
  • II
  • Sometimes she seems a faint perfume,
  • A fragrance that a flower exhaled
  • And God gave form to; now, unveiled,
  • A sunbeam making gold the gloom
  • Of vines that roof some woodland room
  • Of boughs; and now the silvery sound
  • Of streams her presence doth assume--
  • Music, from which, in dreaming drowned,
  • A crystal shape she seems to bloom.
  • III
  • Sometimes she seems the light that lies
  • On foam of waters where the fern
  • Shimmers and drips; now, at some turn
  • Of woodland, bright against the skies,
  • She seems the rainbowed mist that flies;
  • And now the mossy fire that breaks
  • Beneath the feet in azure eyes
  • Of flowers; now the wind that shakes
  • Pale petals from the bough that sighs.
  • IV
  • Sometimes she lures me with a song;
  • Sometimes she guides me with a laugh;
  • Her white hand is a magic staff,
  • Her look a spell to lead me long:
  • Though she be weak and I be strong,
  • She needs but shake her happy hair,
  • But glance her eyes, and, right or wrong,
  • My soul must follow--anywhere
  • She wills--far from the world's loud throng.
  • V
  • Sometimes I think that she must be
  • No part of earth, but merely this--
  • The fair, elusive thing we miss
  • In Nature, that we dream we see
  • Yet never see: that goldenly
  • Beckons; that, limbed with rose and pearl,
  • The Greek made a divinity:--
  • A nymph, a god, a glimmering girl,
  • That haunts the forest's mystery.
  • WOMANHOOD
  • I
  • The summer takes its hue
  • From something opulent as fair in her,
  • And the bright heaven is brighter than it was;
  • Brighter and lovelier,
  • Arching its beautiful blue,
  • Serene and soft, as her sweet gaze, o'er us.
  • II
  • The springtime takes its moods
  • From something in her made of smiles and tears,
  • And flowery earth is flowerier than before,
  • And happier, it appears,
  • Adding new multitudes
  • To flowers, like thoughts, that haunt us evermore.
  • III
  • Summer and spring are wed
  • In her--her nature; and the glamour of
  • Their loveliness, their bounty, as it were,
  • Of life and joy and love,
  • Her being seems to shed,--
  • The magic aura of the heart of her.
  • THE IDYLL OF THE STANDING STONE
  • The teasel and the horsemint spread
  • The hillside as with sunset, sown
  • With blossoms, o'er the Standing-Stone
  • That ripples in its rocky bed:
  • There are no treasuries that hold
  • Gold richer than the marigold
  • That crowns its sparkling head.
  • 'Tis harvest time: a mower stands
  • Among the morning wheat and whets
  • His scythe, and for a space forgets
  • The labor of the ripening lands;
  • Then bends, and through the dewy grain
  • His long scythe hisses, and again
  • He swings it in his hands.
  • And she beholds him where he mows
  • On acres whence the water sends
  • Faint music of reflecting bends
  • And falls that interblend with flows:
  • She stands among the old bee-gums,--
  • Where all the apiary hums,--
  • A simple bramble-rose.
  • She hears him whistling as he leans,
  • And, reaping, sweeps the ripe wheat by;
  • She sighs and smiles, and knows not why,
  • Nor what her heart's disturbance means:
  • He whets his scythe, and, resting, sees
  • Her rose-like 'mid the hives of bees,
  • Beneath the flowering beans.
  • The peacock-purple lizard creeps
  • Along the rail; and deep the drone
  • Of insects makes the country lone
  • With summer where the water sleeps:
  • She hears him singing as he swings
  • His scythe--who thinks of other things
  • Than toil, and, singing, reaps.
  • NOƋRA
  • NoĆ«ra, when sad Fall
  • Has grayed the fallow;
  • Leaf-cramped the wood-brook's brawl
  • In pool and shallow;
  • When, by the woodside, tall
  • Stands sere the mallow.
  • NoĆ«ra, when gray gold
  • And golden gray
  • The crackling hollows fold
  • By every way,
  • Shall I thy face behold,
  • Dear bit of May?
  • When webs are cribs for dew,
  • And gossamers
  • Streak by you, silver-blue;
  • When silence stirs
  • One leaf, of rusty hue,
  • Among the burrs:
  • NoĆ«ra, through the wood,
  • Or through the grain,
  • Come, with the hoiden mood
  • Of wind and rain
  • Fresh in thy sunny blood,
  • Sweetheart, again.
  • NoĆ«ra, when the corn,
  • Reaped on the fields,
  • The asters' stars adorn;
  • And purple shields
  • Of ironweeds lie torn
  • Among the wealds:
  • NoĆ«ra, haply then,
  • Thou being with me,
  • Each ruined greenwood glen
  • Will bud and be
  • Spring's with the spring again,
  • The spring in thee.
  • Thou of the breezy tread;
  • Feet of the breeze:
  • Thou of the sunbeam head;
  • Heart like a bee's:
  • Face like a woodland-bred
  • Anemone's.
  • Thou to October bring
  • An April part!
  • Come! make the wild birds sing,
  • The blossoms start!
  • NoĆ«ra, with the spring
  • Wild in thy heart!
  • Come with our golden year:
  • Come as its gold:
  • With the same laughing, clear,
  • Loved voice of old:
  • In thy cool hair one dear
  • Wild marigold.
  • THE OLD SPRING
  • I
  • Under rocks whereon the rose
  • Like a streak of morning glows;
  • Where the azure-throated newt
  • Drowses on the twisted root;
  • And the brown bees, humming homeward,
  • Stop to suck the honeydew;
  • Fern- and leaf-hid, gleaming gloamward,
  • Drips the wildwood spring I knew,
  • Drips the spring my boyhood knew.
  • II
  • Myrrh and music everywhere
  • Haunt its cascades--like the hair
  • That a Naiad tosses cool,
  • Swimming strangely beautiful,
  • With white fragrance for her bosom,
  • And her mouth a breath of song--
  • Under leaf and branch and blossom
  • Flows the woodland spring along,
  • Sparkling, singing flows along.
  • III
  • Still the wet wan mornings touch
  • Its gray rocks, perhaps; and such
  • Slender stars as dusk may have
  • Pierce the rose that roofs its wave;
  • Still the thrush may call at noontide
  • And the whippoorwill at night;
  • Nevermore, by sun or moontide,
  • Shall I see it gliding white,
  • Falling, flowing, wild and white.
  • A DREAMER OF DREAMS
  • He lived beyond men, and so stood
  • Admitted to the brotherhood
  • Of beauty:--dreams, with which he trod
  • Companioned like some sylvan god.
  • And oft men wondered, when his thought
  • Made all their knowledge seem as naught,
  • If he, like Uther's mystic son,
  • Had not been born for Avalon.
  • When wandering mid the whispering trees,
  • His soul communed with every breeze;
  • Heard voices calling from the glades,
  • Bloom-words of the LeimoniƤds;
  • Or Dryads of the ash and oak,
  • Who syllabled his name and spoke
  • With him of presences and powers
  • That glimpsed in sunbeams, gloomed in showers.
  • By every violet-hallowed brook,
  • Where every bramble-matted nook
  • Rippled and laughed with water sounds,
  • He walked like one on sainted grounds,
  • Fearing intrusion on the spell
  • That kept some fountain-spirit's well,
  • Or woodland genius, sitting where
  • Red, racy berries kissed his hair.
  • Once when the wind, far o'er the hill,
  • Had fall'n and left the wildwood still
  • For Dawn's dim feet to trail across,--
  • Beneath the gnarled boughs, on the moss,
  • The air around him golden-ripe
  • With daybreak,--there, with oaten pipe,
  • His eyes beheld the wood-god, Pan,
  • Goat-bearded, horned; half brute, half man;
  • Who, shaggy-haunched, a savage rhyme
  • Blew in his reed to rudest time;
  • And swollen-jowled, with rolling eye--
  • Beneath the slowly silvering sky,
  • Whose rose streaked through the forest's roof--
  • Danced, while beneath his boisterous hoof
  • The branch was snapped, and, interfused
  • Between gnarled roots, the moss was bruised.
  • And often when he wandered through
  • Old forests at the fall of dew--
  • A new Endymion, who sought
  • A beauty higher than all thought--
  • Some night, men said, most surely he
  • Would favored be of deity:
  • That in the holy solitude
  • Her sudden presence, long-pursued,
  • Unto his gaze would stand confessed:
  • The awful moonlight of her breast
  • Come, high with majesty, and hold
  • His heart's blood till his heart grew cold,
  • Unpulsed, unsinewed, all undone,
  • And snatch his soul to Avalon.
  • DEEP IN THE FOREST
  • I. SPRING ON THE HILLS
  • Ah, shall I follow, on the hills,
  • The Spring, as wild wings follow?
  • Where wild-plum trees make wan the hills,
  • Crabapple trees the hollow,
  • Haunts of the bee and swallow?
  • In redbud brakes and flowery
  • Acclivities of berry;
  • In dogwood dingles, showery
  • With white, where wrens make merry?
  • Or drifts of swarming cherry?
  • In valleys of wild strawberries,
  • And of the clumped May-apple;
  • Or cloudlike trees of haw-berries,
  • With which the south winds grapple,
  • That brook and byway dapple?
  • With eyes of far forgetfulness,--
  • Like some wild wood-thing's daughter,
  • Whose feet are beelike fretfulness,--
  • To see her run like water
  • Through boughs that slipped or caught her.
  • O Spring, to seek, yet find you not!
  • To search, yet never win you!
  • To glimpse, to touch, but bind you not!
  • To lose, and still continue,
  • All sweet evasion in you!
  • In pearly, peach-blush distances
  • You gleam; the woods are braided
  • Of myths; of dream-existences....
  • There, where the brook is shaded,
  • A sudden splendor faded.
  • O presence, like the primrose's,
  • Again I feel your power!
  • With rainy scents of dim roses,
  • Like some elusive flower,
  • Who led me for an hour!
  • II. MOSS AND FERN
  • Where rise the brakes of bramble there,
  • Wrapped with the trailing rose;
  • Through cane where waters ramble, there
  • Where deep the sword-grass grows,
  • Who knows?
  • Perhaps, unseen of eyes of man,
  • Hides Pan.
  • Perhaps the creek, whose pebbles make
  • A foothold for the mint,
  • May bear,--where soft its trebles make
  • Confession,--some vague hint,
  • (The print,
  • Goat-hoofed, of one who lightly ran,)
  • Of Pan.
  • Where, in the hollow of the hills
  • Ferns deepen to the knees,
  • What sounds are those above the hills,
  • And now among the trees?--
  • No breeze!--
  • The syrinx, haply, none may scan,
  • Of Pan.
  • In woods where waters break upon
  • The hush like some soft word;
  • Where sun-shot shadows shake upon
  • The moss, who has not heard--
  • No bird!--
  • The flute, as breezy as a fan,
  • Of Pan?
  • Far in, where mosses lay for us
  • Still carpets, cool and plush;
  • Where bloom and branch and ray for us
  • Sleep, waking with a rush--
  • The hush
  • But sounds the satyr hoof a span
  • Of Pan.
  • O woods,--whose thrushes sing to us,
  • Whose brooks dance sparkling heels;
  • Whose wild aromas cling to us,--
  • While here our wonder kneels,
  • Who steals
  • Upon us, brown as bark with tan,
  • But Pan?
  • III. THE THORN TREE
  • The night is sad with silver and the day is glad with gold,
  • And the woodland silence listens to a legend never old,
  • Of the Lady of the Fountain, whom the faery people know,
  • With her limbs of samite whiteness and her hair of golden glow,
  • Whom the boyish South Wind seeks for and the girlish-stepping Rain;
  • Whom the sleepy leaves still whisper men shall never see again:
  • She whose Vivien charms were mistress of the magic Merlin knew,
  • That could change the dew to glowworms and the glowworms into dew.
  • There's a thorn tree in the forest, and the faeries know the tree,
  • With its branches gnarled and wrinkled as a face with sorcery;
  • But the Maytime brings it clusters of a rainy fragrant white,
  • Like the bloom-bright brows of beauty or a hand of lifted light.
  • And all day the silence whispers to the sun-ray of the morn
  • How the bloom is lovely Vivien and how Merlin is the thorn:
  • How she won the doting wizard with her naked loveliness
  • Till he told her dƦmon secrets that must make his magic less.
  • How she charmed him and enchanted in the thorn-tree's thorns to lie
  • Forever with his passion that should never dim or die:
  • And with wicked laughter looking on this thing which she had done,
  • Like a visible aroma lingered sparkling in the sun:
  • How she stooped to kiss the pathos of an elf-lock of his beard,
  • In a mockery of parting and mock pity of his weird:
  • But her magic had forgotten that "who bends to give a kiss
  • Will but bring the curse upon them of the person whose it is":
  • So the silence tells the secret.--And at night the faeries see
  • How the tossing bloom is Vivien, who is struggling to be free,
  • In the thorny arms of Merlin, who forever is the tree.
  • IV. THE HAMADRYAD
  • She stood among the longest ferns
  • The valley held; and in her hand
  • One blossom, like the light that burns
  • Vermilion o'er a sunset land;
  • And round her hair a twisted band
  • Of pink-pierced mountain-laurel blooms:
  • And darker than dark pools, that stand
  • Below the star-communing glooms,
  • Her eyes beneath her hair's perfumes.
  • I saw the moonbeam sandals on
  • Her flowerlike feet, that seemed too chaste
  • To tread true gold: and, like the dawn
  • On splendid peaks that lord a waste
  • Of solitude lost gods have graced,
  • Her face: she stood there, faultless-hipped,
  • Bound as with cestused silver,--chased
  • With acorn-cup and crown, and tipped
  • With oak leaves,--whence her chiton slipped.
  • Limbs that the gods call loveliness!--
  • The grace and glory of all Greece
  • Wrought in one marble shape were less
  • Than her perfection!--'Mid the trees
  • I saw her--and time seemed to cease
  • For me.--And, lo! I lived my old
  • Greek life again of classic ease,
  • Barbarian as the myths that rolled
  • Me back into the Age of Gold.
  • PRELUDES
  • I
  • There is no rhyme that is half so sweet
  • As the song of the wind in the rippling wheat;
  • There is no metre that's half so fine
  • As the lilt of the brook under rock and vine;
  • And the loveliest lyric I ever heard
  • Was the wildwood strain of a forest bird.--
  • If the wind and the brook and the bird would teach
  • My heart their beautiful parts of speech,
  • And the natural art that they say these with,
  • My soul would sing of beauty and myth
  • In a rhyme and metre that none before
  • Have sung in their love, or dreamed in their lore,
  • And the world would be richer one poet the more.
  • II
  • A thought to lift me up to those
  • Sweet wildflowers of the pensive woods;
  • The lofty, lowly attitudes
  • Of bluet and of bramble-rose:
  • To lift me where my mind may reach
  • The lessons which their beauties teach.
  • A dream, to lead my spirit on
  • With sounds of faery shawms and flutes,
  • And all mysterious attributes
  • Of skies of dusk and skies of dawn:
  • To lead me, like the wandering brooks,
  • Past all the knowledge of the books.
  • A song, to make my heart a guest
  • Of happiness whose soul is love;
  • One with the life that knoweth of
  • But song that turneth toil to rest:
  • To make me cousin to the birds,
  • Whose music needs not wisdom's words.
  • MAY
  • The golden discs of the rattlesnake-weed,
  • That spangle the woods and dance--
  • No gleam of gold that the twilights hold
  • Is strong as their necromance:
  • For, under the oaks where the woodpaths lead,
  • The golden discs of the rattlesnake-weed
  • Are the May's own utterance.
  • The azure stars of the bluet bloom,
  • That sprinkle the woodland's trance--
  • No blink of blue that a cloud lets through
  • Is sweet as their countenance:
  • For, over the knolls that the woods perfume,
  • The azure stars of the bluet bloom
  • Are the light of the May's own glance.
  • With her wondering words and her looks she comes,
  • In a sunbeam of a gown;
  • She needs but think and the blossoms wink,
  • But look, and they shower down.
  • By orchard ways, where the wild bee hums,
  • With her wondering words and her looks she comes
  • Like a little maid to town.
  • WHAT LITTLE THINGS!
  • From "One Day and Another"
  • What little things are those
  • That hold our happiness!
  • A smile, a glance, a rose
  • Dropped from her hair or dress;
  • A word, a look, a touch,--
  • These are so much, so much.
  • An air we can't forget;
  • A sunset's gold that gleams;
  • A spray of mignonette,
  • Will fill the soul with dreams
  • More than all history says,
  • Or romance of old days.
  • For of the human heart,
  • Not brain, is memory;
  • These things it makes a part
  • Of its own entity;
  • The joys, the pains whereof
  • Are the very food of love.
  • IN THE SHADOW OF THE BEECHES
  • In the shadow of the beeches,
  • Where the fragile wildflowers bloom;
  • Where the pensive silence pleaches
  • Green a roof of cool perfume,
  • Have you felt an awe imperious
  • As when, in a church, mysterious
  • Windows paint with God the gloom?
  • In the shadow of the beeches,
  • Where the rock-ledged waters flow;
  • Where the sun's slant splendor bleaches
  • Every wave to foaming snow,
  • Have you felt a music solemn
  • As when minster arch and column
  • Echo organ worship low?
  • In the shadow of the beeches,
  • Where the light and shade are blent;
  • Where the forest bird beseeches,
  • And the breeze is brimmed with scent,--
  • Is it joy or melancholy
  • That o'erwhelms us partly, wholly,
  • To our spirit's betterment?
  • In the shadow of the beeches
  • Lay me where no eye perceives;
  • Where,--like some great arm that reaches
  • Gently as a love that grieves,--
  • One gnarled root may clasp me kindly,
  • While the long years, working blindly,
  • Slowly change my dust to leaves.
  • UNREQUITED
  • Passion? not hers! who held me with pure eyes:
  • One hand among the deep curls of her brow,
  • I drank the girlhood of her gaze with sighs:
  • She never sighed, nor gave me kiss or vow.
  • So have I seen a clear October pool,
  • Cold, liquid topaz, set within the sere
  • Gold of the woodland, tremorless and cool,
  • Reflecting all the heartbreak of the year.
  • Sweetheart? not she! whose voice was music-sweet;
  • Whose face loaned language to melodious prayer.
  • Sweetheart I called her.--When did she repeat
  • Sweet to one hope, or heart to one despair!
  • So have I seen a wildflower's fragrant head
  • Sung to and sung to by a longing bird;
  • And at the last, albeit the bird lay dead,
  • No blossom wilted, for it had not heard.
  • THE SOLITARY
  • Upon the mossed rock by the spring
  • She sits, forgetful of her pail,
  • Lost in remote remembering
  • Of that which may no more avail.
  • Her thin, pale hair is dimly dressed
  • Above a brow lined deep with care,
  • The color of a leaf long pressed,
  • A faded leaf that once was fair.
  • You may not know her from the stone
  • So still she sits who does not stir,
  • Thinking of this one thing alone--
  • The love that never came to her.
  • A TWILIGHT MOTH
  • Dusk is thy dawn; when Eve puts on its state
  • Of gold and purple in the marbled west,
  • Thou comest forth like some embodied trait,
  • Or dim conceit, a lily bud confessed;
  • Or of a rose the visible wish; that, white,
  • Goes softly messengering through the night,
  • Whom each expectant flower makes its guest.
  • All day the primroses have thought of thee,
  • Their golden heads close-haremed from the heat;
  • All day the mystic moonflowers silkenly
  • Veiled snowy faces,--that no bee might greet,
  • Or butterfly that, weighed with pollen, passed;--
  • Keeping Sultana charms for thee, at last,
  • Their lord, who comest to salute each sweet.
  • Cool-throated flowers that avoid the day's
  • Too fervid kisses; every bud that drinks
  • The tipsy dew and to the starlight plays
  • Nocturnes of fragrance, thy wing'd shadow links
  • In bonds of secret brotherhood and faith;
  • O bearer of their order's shibboleth,
  • Like some pale symbol fluttering o'er these pinks.
  • What dost them whisper in the balsam's ear
  • That sets it blushing, or the hollyhock's,--
  • A syllabled silence that no man may hear,--
  • As dreamily upon its stem it rocks?
  • What spell dost bear from listening plant to plant,
  • Like some white witch, some ghostly ministrant,
  • Some specter of some perished flower of phlox?
  • O voyager of that universe which lies
  • Between the four walls of this garden fair,--
  • Whose constellations are the fireflies
  • That wheel their instant courses everywhere,--
  • Mid faery firmaments wherein one sees
  • Mimic Boƶtes and the Pleiades,
  • Thou steerest like some faery ship of air.
  • Gnome-wrought of moonbeam-fluff and gossamer,
  • Silent as scent, perhaps thou chariotest
  • Mab or King Oberon; or, haply, her
  • His queen, Titania, on some midnight quest.--
  • Oh for the herb, the magic euphrasy,
  • That should unmask thee to mine eyes, ah me!
  • And all that world at which my soul hath guessed!
  • THE OLD FARM
  • Dormered and verandaed, cool,
  • Locust-girdled, on the hill;
  • Stained with weather-wear, and dull-
  • Streak'd with lichens; every sill
  • Thresholding the beautiful;
  • I can see it standing there,
  • Brown above the woodland deep,
  • Wrapped in lights of lavender,
  • By the warm wind rocked asleep,
  • Violet shadows everywhere.
  • I remember how the Spring,
  • Liberal-lapped, bewildered its
  • Acred orchards, murmuring,
  • Kissed to blossom; budded bits
  • Where the wood-thrush came to sing.
  • Barefoot Spring, at first who trod,
  • Like a beggermaid, adown
  • The wet woodland; where the god,
  • With the bright sun for a crown
  • And the firmament for rod,
  • Met her; clothed her; wedded her;
  • Her Cophetua: when, lo!
  • All the hill, one breathing blur,
  • Burst in beauty; gleam and glow
  • Blent with pearl and lavender.
  • Seckel, blackheart, palpitant
  • Rained their bleaching strays; and white
  • Snowed the damson, bent aslant;
  • Rambow-tree and romanite
  • Seemed beneath deep drifts to pant.
  • And it stood there, brown and gray,
  • In the bee-boom and the bloom,
  • In the shadow and the ray,
  • In the passion and perfume,
  • Grave as age among the gay.
  • Wild with laughter romped the clear
  • Boyish voices round its walls;
  • Rare wild-roses were the dear
  • Girlish faces in its halls,
  • Music-haunted all the year.
  • Far before it meadows full
  • Of green pennyroyal sank;
  • Clover-dotted as with wool
  • Here and there; with now a bank
  • Hot of color; and the cool
  • Dark-blue shadows unconfined
  • Of the clouds rolled overhead:
  • Clouds, from which the summer wind
  • Blew with rain, and freshly shed
  • Dew upon the flowerkind.
  • Where through mint and gypsy-lily
  • Runs the rocky brook away,
  • Musical among the hilly
  • Solitudes,--its flashing spray
  • Sunlight-dashed or forest-stilly,--
  • Buried in deep sassafras,
  • Memory follows up the hill
  • Still some cowbell's mellow brass,
  • Where the ruined water-mill
  • Looms, half-hid in cane and grass....
  • Oh, the farmhouse! is it set
  • On the hilltop still? 'mid musk
  • Of the meads? where, violet,
  • Deepens all the dreaming dusk,
  • And the locust-trees hang wet.
  • While the sunset, far and low,
  • On its westward windows dashes
  • Primrose or pomegranate glow;
  • And above, in glimmering splashes,
  • Lilac stars the heavens sow.
  • Sleeps it still among its roses,--
  • Oldtime roses? while the choir
  • Of the lonesome insects dozes:
  • And the white moon, drifting higher,
  • O'er its mossy roof reposes--
  • Sleeps it still among its roses?
  • THE WHIPPOORWILL
  • I
  • Above lone woodland ways that led
  • To dells the stealthy twilights tread
  • The west was hot geranium red;
  • And still, and still,
  • Along old lanes the locusts sow
  • With clustered pearls the Maytimes know,
  • Deep in the crimson afterglow,
  • We heard the homeward cattle low,
  • And then the far-off, far-off woe
  • Of "whippoorwill!" of "whippoorwill!"
  • II
  • Beneath the idle beechen boughs
  • We heard the far bells of the cows
  • Come slowly jangling towards the house;
  • And still, and still,
  • Beyond the light that would not die
  • Out of the scarlet-haunted sky;
  • Beyond the evening-star's white eye
  • Of glittering chalcedony,
  • Drained out of dusk the plaintive cry
  • Of "whippoorwill," of "whippoorwill."
  • III
  • And in the city oft, when swims
  • The pale moon o'er the smoke that dims
  • Its disc, I dream of wildwood limbs;
  • And still, and still,
  • I seem to hear, where shadows grope
  • Mid ferns and flowers that dewdrops rope,--
  • Lost in faint deeps of heliotrope
  • Above the clover-sweetened slope,--
  • Retreat, despairing, past all hope,
  • The whippoorwill, the whippoorwill.
  • REVEALMENT
  • A sense of sadness in the golden air;
  • A pensiveness, that has no part in care,
  • As if the Season, by some woodland pool,
  • Braiding the early blossoms in her hair,
  • Seeing her loveliness reflected there,
  • Had sighed to find herself so beautiful.
  • A breathlessness; a feeling as of fear;
  • Holy and dim, as of a mystery near,
  • As if the World, about us, whispering went
  • With lifted finger and hand-hollowed ear,
  • Hearkening a music, that we cannot hear,
  • Haunting the quickening earth and firmament.
  • A prescience of the soul that has no name;
  • Expectancy that is both wild and tame,
  • As if the Earth, from out its azure ring
  • Of heavens, looked to see, as white as flame,--
  • As Perseus once to chained Andromeda came,--
  • The swift, divine revealment of the Spring.
  • HEPATICAS
  • In the frail hepaticas,--
  • That the early Springtide tossed,
  • Sapphire-like, along the ways
  • Of the woodlands that she crossed,--
  • I behold, with other eyes,
  • Footprints of a dream that flies.
  • One who leads me; whom I seek:
  • In whose loveliness there is
  • All the glamour that the Greek
  • Knew as wind-borne Artemis.--
  • I am mortal. Woe is me!
  • Her sweet immortality!
  • Spirit, must I always fare,
  • Following thy averted looks?
  • Now thy white arm, now thy hair,
  • Glimpsed among the trees and brooks?
  • Thou who hauntest, whispering,
  • All the slopes and vales of Spring.
  • Cease to lure! or grant to me
  • All thy beauty! though it pain,
  • Slay with splendor utterly!
  • Flash revealment on my brain!
  • And one moment let me see
  • All thy immortality!
  • THE WIND OF SPRING
  • The wind that breathes of columbines
  • And celandines that crowd the rocks;
  • That shakes the balsam of the pines
  • With laughter from his airy locks,
  • Stops at my city door and knocks.
  • He calls me far a-forest, where
  • The twin-leaf and the blood-root bloom;
  • And, circled by the amber air,
  • Life sits with beauty and perfume
  • Weaving the new web of her loom.
  • He calls me where the waters run
  • Through fronding ferns where wades the hern;
  • And, sparkling in the equal sun,
  • Song leans above her brimming urn,
  • And dreams the dreams that love shall learn.
  • The wind has summoned, and I go:
  • To read God's meaning in each line
  • The wildflowers write; and, walking slow,
  • God's purpose, of which song is sign,--
  • The wind's great, gusty hand in mine.
  • THE CATBIRD
  • I
  • The tufted gold of the sassafras,
  • And the gold of the spicewood-bush,
  • Bewilder the ways of the forest pass,
  • And brighten the underbrush:
  • The white-starred drifts of the wild-plum tree,
  • And the haw with its pearly plumes,
  • And the redbud, misted rosily,
  • Dazzle the woodland glooms.
  • II
  • And I hear the song of the catbird wake
  • I' the boughs o' the gnarled wild-crab,
  • Or there where the snows of the dogwood shake,
  • That the silvery sunbeams stab:
  • And it seems to me that a magic lies
  • In the crystal sweet of its notes,
  • That a myriad blossoms open their eyes
  • As its strain above them floats.
  • III
  • I see the bluebell's blue unclose,
  • And the trillium's stainless white;
  • The birdfoot-violet's purple and rose,
  • And the poppy, golden-bright!
  • And I see the eyes of the bluet wink,
  • And the heads of the white-hearts nod;
  • And the baby mouths of the woodland-pink
  • And sorrel salute the sod.
  • IV
  • And this, meseems, does the catbird say,
  • As the blossoms crowd i' the sun:--
  • "Up, up! and out! oh, out and away!
  • Up, up! and out, each one!
  • Sweethearts! sweethearts! oh, sweet, sweet, sweet!
  • Come listen and hark to me!
  • The Spring, the Spring, with her fragrant feet,
  • Is passing this way!--Oh, hark to the beat
  • Of her beelike heart!--Oh, sweet, sweet, sweet!
  • Come! open your eyes and see!
  • See, see, see!"
  • A WOODLAND GRAVE
  • White moons may come, white moons may go--
  • She sleeps where early blossoms blow;
  • Knows nothing of the leafy June,
  • That leans above her night and noon,
  • Crowned now with sunbeam, now with moon,
  • Watching her roses grow.
  • The downy moth at twilight comes
  • And flutters round their honeyed blooms:
  • Long, lazy clouds, like ivory,
  • That isle the blue lagoons of sky,
  • Redden to molten gold and dye
  • With flame the pine-deep glooms.
  • Dew, dripping from wet fern and leaf;
  • The wind, that shakes the violet's sheaf;
  • The slender sound of water lone,
  • That makes a harp-string of some stone,
  • And now a wood bird's glimmering moan,
  • Seem whisperings there of grief.
  • Her garden, where the lilacs grew,
  • Where, on old walls, old roses blew,
  • Head-heavy with their mellow musk,
  • Where, when the beetle's drone was husk,
  • She lingered in the dying dusk,
  • No more shall know that knew.
  • Her orchard,--where the Spring and she
  • Stood listening to each bird and bee,--
  • That, from its fragrant firmament,
  • Snowed blossoms on her as she went,
  • (A blossom with their blossoms blent)
  • No more her face shall see.
  • White moons may come, white moons may go--
  • She sleeps where early blossoms blow:
  • Around her headstone many a seed
  • Shall sow itself; and brier and weed
  • Shall grow to hide it from men's heed,
  • And none will care or know.
  • SUNSET DREAMS
  • The moth and beetle wing about
  • The garden ways of other days;
  • Above the hills, a fiery shout
  • Of gold, the day dies slowly out,
  • Like some wild blast a huntsman blows:
  • And o'er the hills my Fancy goes,
  • Following the sunset's golden call
  • Unto a vine-hung garden wall,
  • Where she awaits me in the gloom,
  • Between the lily and the rose,
  • With arms and lips of warm perfume,
  • The dream of Love my Fancy knows.
  • The glowworm and the firefly glow
  • Among the ways of bygone days;
  • A golden shaft shot from a bow
  • Of silver, star and moon swing low
  • Above the hills where twilight lies:
  • And o'er the hills my Longing flies,
  • Following the star's far-arrowed gold,
  • Unto a gate where, as of old,
  • She waits amid the rose and rue,
  • With star-bright hair and night-dark eyes,
  • The dream, to whom my heart is true,
  • My dream of Love that never dies.
  • THE OLD BYWAY
  • Its rotting fence one scarcely sees
  • Through sumac and wild blackberries,
  • Thick elder and the bramble-rose,
  • Big ox-eyed daisies where the bees
  • Hang droning in repose.
  • The little lizards lie all day
  • Gray on its rocks of lichen-gray;
  • And, insect-Ariels of the sun,
  • The butterflies make bright its way,
  • Its path where chipmunks run.
  • A lyric there the redbird lifts,
  • While, twittering, the swallow drifts
  • 'Neath wandering clouds of sleepy cream,--
  • In which the wind makes azure rifts,--
  • O'er dells where wood-doves dream.
  • The brown grasshoppers rasp and bound
  • Mid weeds and briers that hedge it round;
  • And in its grass-grown ruts,--where stirs
  • The harmless snake,--mole-crickets sound
  • Their faery dulcimers.
  • At evening, when the sad west turns
  • To lonely night a cheek that burns,
  • The tree-toads in the wild-plum sing;
  • And ghosts of long-dead flowers and ferns
  • The winds wake, whispering.
  • "BELOW THE SUNSET'S RANGE OF ROSE"
  • Below the sunset's range of rose,
  • Below the heaven's deepening blue,
  • Down woodways where the balsam blows,
  • And milkweed tufts hang, gray with dew,
  • A Jersey heifer stops and lows--
  • The cows come home by one, by two.
  • There is no star yet: but the smell
  • Of hay and pennyroyal mix
  • With herb aromas of the dell,
  • Where the root-hidden cricket clicks:
  • Among the ironweeds a bell
  • Clangs near the rail-fenced clover-ricks.
  • She waits upon the slope beside
  • The windlassed well the plum trees shade,
  • The well curb that the goose-plums hide;
  • Her light hand on the bucket laid,
  • Unbonneted she waits, glad-eyed,
  • Her gown as simple as her braid.
  • She sees fawn-colored backs among
  • The sumacs now; a tossing horn
  • Its clashing bell of copper rung:
  • Long shadows lean upon the corn,
  • And slow the day dies, scarlet stung,
  • The cloud in it a rosy thorn.
  • Below the pleasant moon, that tips
  • The tree tops of the hillside, fly
  • The flitting bats; the twilight slips,
  • In firefly spangles, twinkling by,
  • Through which _he_ comes: Their happy lips
  • Meet--and one star leaps in the sky.
  • He takes her bucket, and they speak
  • Of married hopes while in the grass
  • The plum drops glowing as her cheek;
  • The patient cows look back or pass:
  • And in the west one golden streak
  • Burns as if God gazed through a glass.
  • MUSIC OF SUMMER
  • I
  • Thou sit'st among the sunny silences
  • Of terraced hills and woodland galleries,
  • Thou utterance of all calm melodies,
  • Thou lutanist of Earth's most affluent lute,--
  • Where no false note intrudes
  • To mar the silent music,--branch and root,--
  • Charming the fields ripe, orchards and deep woods,
  • To song similitudes
  • Of flower and seed and fruit.
  • II
  • Oft have I seen thee, in some sensuous air,
  • Bewitch the broad wheat-acres everywhere
  • To imitated gold of thy deep hair:
  • The peach, by thy red lips' delicious trouble,
  • Blown into gradual dyes
  • Of crimson; and beheld thy magic double--
  • Dark-blue with fervid influence of thine eyes--
  • The grapes' rotundities,
  • Bubble by purple bubble.
  • III
  • Deliberate uttered into life intense,
  • Out of thy soul's melodious eloquence
  • Beauty evolves its just preĆ«minence:
  • The lily, from some pensive-smitten chord
  • Drawing significance
  • Of purity, a visible hush stands: starred
  • With splendor, from thy passionate utterance,
  • The rose writes its romance
  • In blushing word on word.
  • IV
  • As star by star Day harps in Evening,
  • The inspiration of all things that sing
  • Is in thy hands and from their touch takes wing:
  • All brooks, all birds,--whom song can never sate,--
  • The leaves, the wind and rain,
  • Green frogs and insects, singing soon and late,
  • Thy sympathies inspire, thy heart's refrain,
  • Whose sounds invigorate
  • With rest life's weary brain.
  • V
  • And as the Night, like some mysterious rune,
  • Its beauty makes emphatic with the moon,
  • Thou lutest us no immaterial tune:
  • But where dim whispers haunt the cane and corn,
  • By thy still strain made strong,
  • Earth's awful avatar,--in whom is born
  • Thy own deep music,--labors all night long
  • With growth, assuring Morn
  • Assumes with onward song.
  • MIDSUMMER
  • I
  • The mellow smell of hollyhocks
  • And marigolds and pinks and phlox
  • Blends with the homely garden scents
  • Of onions, silvering into rods;
  • Of peppers, scarlet with their pods;
  • And (rose of all the esculents)
  • Of broad plebeian cabbages,
  • Breathing content and corpulent ease.
  • II
  • The buzz of wasp and fly makes hot
  • The spaces of the garden-plot;
  • And from the orchard,--where the fruit
  • Ripens and rounds, or, loosed with heat,
  • Rolls, hornet-clung, before the feet,--
  • One hears the veery's golden flute,
  • That mixes with the sleepy hum
  • Of bees that drowsily go and come.
  • III
  • The podded musk of gourd and vine
  • Embower a gate of roughest pine,
  • That leads into a wood where day
  • Sits, leaning o'er a forest pool,
  • Watching the lilies opening cool,
  • And dragonflies at airy play,
  • While, dim and near, the quietness
  • Rustles and stirs her leafy dress.
  • IV
  • Far-off a cowbell clangs awake
  • The noon who slumbers in the brake:
  • And now a pewee, plaintively,
  • Whistles the day to sleep again:
  • A rain-crow croaks a rune for rain,
  • And from the ripest apple tree
  • A great gold apple thuds, where, slow,
  • The red cock curves his neck to crow.
  • V
  • Hens cluck their broods from place to place,
  • While clinking home, with chain and trace,
  • The cart-horse plods along the road
  • Where afternoon sits with his dreams:
  • Hot fragrance of hay-making streams
  • Above him, and a high-heaped load
  • Goes creaking by and with it, sweet,
  • The aromatic soul of heat.
  • VI
  • "Coo-ee! coo-ee!" the evenfall
  • Cries, and the hills repeat the call:
  • "Coo-ee! coo-ee!" and by the log
  • Labor unharnesses his plow,
  • While to the barn comes cow on cow:
  • "Coo-ee! coo-ee!"--and, with his dog,
  • Barefooted boyhood down the lane
  • "Coo-ees" the cattle home again.
  • THE RAIN-CROW
  • I
  • Can freckled August,--drowsing warm and blond
  • Beside a wheat-shock in the white-topped mead,
  • In her hot hair the yellow daisies wound,--
  • O bird of rain, lend aught but sleepy heed
  • To thee? when no plumed weed, no feathered seed
  • Blows by her; and no ripple breaks the pond,
  • That gleams like flint within its rim of grasses,
  • Through which the dragonfly forever passes
  • Like splintered diamond.
  • II
  • Drouth weights the trees; and from the farmhouse eaves
  • The locust, pulse-beat of the summer day,
  • Throbs; and the lane, that shambles under leaves
  • Limp with the heat--a league of rutty way--
  • Is lost in dust; and sultry scents of hay
  • Breathe from the panting meadows heaped with sheaves--
  • Now, now, O bird, what hint is there of rain,
  • In thirsty meadow or on burning plain,
  • That thy keen eye perceives?
  • III
  • But thou art right. Thou prophesiest true.
  • For hardly hast thou ceased thy forecasting,
  • When, up the western fierceness of scorched blue,
  • Great water-carrier winds their buckets bring
  • Brimming with freshness. How their dippers ring
  • And flash and rumble! lavishing large dew
  • On corn and forest land, that, streaming wet,
  • Their hilly backs against the downpour set,
  • Like giants, loom in view.
  • IV
  • The butterfly, safe under leaf and flower,
  • Has found a roof, knowing how true thou art;
  • The bumblebee, within the last half-hour,
  • Has ceased to hug the honey to its heart;
  • While in the barnyard, under shed and cart,
  • Brood-hens have housed.--But I, who scorned thy power,
  • Barometer of birds,--like August there,--
  • Beneath a beech, dripping from foot to hair,
  • Like some drenched truant, cower.
  • FIELD AND FOREST CALL
  • I
  • There is a field, that leans upon two hills,
  • Foamed o'er of flowers and twinkling with clear rills;
  • That in its girdle of wild acres bears
  • The anodyne of rest that cures all cares;
  • Wherein soft wind and sun and sound are blent
  • With fragrance--as in some old instrument
  • Sweet chords;--calm things, that Nature's magic spell
  • Distills from Heaven's azure crucible,
  • And pours on Earth to make the sick mind well.
  • There lies the path, they say--
  • Come away! come away!
  • II
  • There is a forest, lying 'twixt two streams,
  • Sung through of birds and haunted of dim dreams;
  • That in its league-long hand of trunk and leaf
  • Lifts a green wand that charms away all grief;
  • Wrought of quaint silence and the stealth of things,
  • Vague, whispering' touches, gleams and twitterings,
  • Dews and cool shadows--that the mystic soul
  • Of Nature permeates with suave control,
  • And waves o'er Earth to make the sad heart whole.
  • There lies the road, they say--
  • Come away! come away!
  • OLD HOMES
  • Old homes among the hills! I love their gardens;
  • Their old rock fences, that our day inherits;
  • Their doors, round which the great trees stand like wardens;
  • Their paths, down which the shadows march like spirits;
  • Broad doors and paths that reach bird-haunted gardens.
  • I see them gray among their ancient acres,
  • Severe of front, their gables lichen-sprinkled,--
  • Like gentle-hearted, solitary Quakers,
  • Grave and religious, with kind faces wrinkled,--
  • Serene among their memory-hallowed acres.
  • Their gardens, banked with roses and with lilies--
  • Those sweet aristocrats of all the flowers--
  • Where Springtime mints her gold in daffodillies,
  • And Autumn coins her marigolds in showers,
  • And all the hours are toilless as the lilies.
  • I love their orchards where the gay woodpecker
  • Flits, flashing o'er you, like a wingĆ©d jewel;
  • Their woods, whose floors of moss the squirrels checker
  • With half-hulled nuts; and where, in cool renewal,
  • The wild brooks laugh, and raps the red woodpecker.
  • Old homes! old hearts! Upon my soul forever
  • Their peace and gladness lie like tears and laughter;
  • Like love they touch me, through the years that sever,
  • With simple faith; like friendship, draw me after
  • The dreamy patience that is theirs forever.
  • THE FOREST WAY
  • I
  • I climbed a forest path and found
  • A dim cave in the dripping ground,
  • Where dwelt the spirit of cool sound,
  • Who wrought with crystal triangles,
  • And hollowed foam of rippled bells,
  • A music of mysterious spells.
  • II
  • Where Sleep her bubble-jewels spilled
  • Of dreams; and Silence twilight-filled
  • Her emerald buckets, star-instilled,
  • With liquid whispers of lost springs,
  • And mossy tread of woodland things,
  • And drip of dew that greenly clings.
  • III
  • Here by those servitors of Sound,
  • Warders of that enchanted ground,
  • My soul and sense were seized and bound,
  • And, in a dungeon deep of trees
  • Entranced, were laid at lazy ease,
  • The charge of woodland mysteries.
  • IV
  • The minions of Prince Drowsihead,
  • The wood-perfumes, with sleepy tread,
  • Tiptoed around my ferny bed:
  • And far away I heard report
  • Of one who dimly rode to Court,
  • The Faery Princess, Eve-Amort.
  • V
  • Her herald winds sang as they passed;
  • And there her beauty stood at last,
  • With wild gold locks, a band held fast,
  • Above blue eyes, as clear as spar;
  • While from a curved and azure jar
  • She poured the white moon and a star.
  • SUNSET AND STORM
  • Deep with divine tautology,
  • The sunset's mighty mystery
  • Again has traced the scroll-like west
  • With hieroglyphs of burning gold:
  • Forever new, forever old,
  • Its miracle is manifest.
  • Time lays the scroll away. And now
  • Above the hills a giant brow
  • Of cloud Night lifts; and from his arm,
  • Barbaric black, upon the world,
  • With thunder, wind and fire, is hurled
  • His awful argument of storm.
  • What part, O man, is yours in such?
  • Whose awe and wonder are in touch
  • With Nature,--speaking rapture to
  • Your soul,--yet leaving in your reach
  • No human word of thought or speech
  • Commensurate with the thing you view.
  • QUIET LANES
  • From the lyrical eclogue "One Day and Another"
  • Now rests the season in forgetfulness,
  • Careless in beauty of maturity;
  • The ripened roses round brown temples, she
  • Fulfills completion in a dreamy guess.
  • Now Time grants night the more and day the less:
  • The gray decides; and brown
  • Dim golds and drabs in dulling green express
  • Themselves and redden as the year goes down.
  • Sadder the fields where, thrusting hoary high
  • Their tasseled heads, the Lear-like corn-stocks die,
  • And, Falstaff-like, buff-bellied pumpkins lie.--
  • Deepening with tenderness,
  • Sadder the blue of hills that lounge along
  • The lonesome west; sadder the song
  • Of the wild redbird in the leafage yellow.--
  • Deeper and dreamier, aye!
  • Than woods or waters, leans the languid sky
  • Above lone orchards where the cider press
  • Drips and the russets mellow.
  • Nature grows liberal: from the beechen leaves
  • The beech-nuts' burrs their little purses thrust,
  • Plump with the copper of the nuts that rust;
  • Above the grass the spendthrift spider weaves
  • A web of silver for which dawn designs
  • Thrice twenty rows of pearls: beneath the oak,
  • That rolls old roots in many gnarly lines,--
  • The polished acorns, from their saucers broke,
  • Strew oval agates.--On sonorous pines
  • The far wind organs; but the forest near
  • Is silent; and the blue-white smoke
  • Of burning brush, beyond that field of hay,
  • Hangs like a pillar in the atmosphere:
  • But now it shakes--it breaks, and all the vines
  • And tree tops tremble; see! the wind is here!
  • Billowing and boisterous; and the smiling day
  • Rejoices in its clamor. Earth and sky
  • Resound with glory of its majesty,
  • Impetuous splendor of its rushing by.--
  • But on those heights the woodland dark is still,
  • Expectant of its coming.... Far away
  • Each anxious tree upon each waiting hill
  • Tingles anticipation, as in gray
  • Surmise of rapture. Now the first gusts play,
  • Like laughter low, about their rippling spines;
  • And now the wildwood, one exultant sway,
  • Shouts--and the light at each tumultuous pause,
  • The light that glooms and shines,
  • Seems hands in wild applause.
  • How glows that garden!--Though the white mists keep
  • The vagabonding flowers reminded of
  • Decay that comes to slay in open love,
  • When the full moon hangs cold and night is deep;
  • Unheeding still their cardinal colors leap
  • Gay in the crescent of the blade of death,--
  • Spaced innocents whom he prepares to reap,--
  • Staying his scythe a breath
  • To mark their beauty ere, with one last sweep,
  • He lays them dead and turns away to weep.--
  • Let me admire,--
  • Before the sickle of the coming cold
  • Shall mow them down,--their beauties manifold:
  • How like to spurts of fire
  • That scarlet salvia lifts its blooms, which heap
  • With flame the sunlight. And, as sparkles creep
  • Through charring vellum, up that window's screen
  • The cypress dots with crimson all its green,
  • The haunt of many bees.
  • Cascading dark old porch-built lattices,
  • The nightshade bleeds with berries; drops of blood
  • Hanging in clusters 'mid the blue monk's-hood.
  • There is a garden old,
  • Where bright-hued clumps of zinnias unfold
  • Their formal flowers; where the marigold
  • Lifts a pinched shred of orange sunset caught
  • And elfed in petals; the nasturtium,
  • Deep, pungent-leaved and acrid of perfume,
  • Hangs up a goblin bonnet, pixy-brought
  • From Gnomeland. There, predominant red,
  • And arrogant, the dahlia lifts its head,
  • Beside the balsam's rose-stained horns of honey,
  • Lost in the murmuring, sunny
  • Dry wildness of the weedy flower bed;
  • Where crickets and the weed-bugs, noon and night,
  • Shrill dirges for the flowers that soon shall die,
  • And flowers already dead.--
  • I seem to hear the passing Summer sigh:
  • A voice, that seems to weep,--
  • "Too soon, too soon the Beautiful passes by!
  • And soon, among these bowers
  • Will dripping Autumn mourn with all her flowers"--
  • If I, perchance, might peep
  • Beneath those leaves of podded hollyhocks,
  • That the bland wind with odorous murmurs rocks,
  • I might behold her,--white
  • And weary,--Summer, 'mid her flowers asleep,
  • Her drowsy flowers asleep,
  • The withered poppies knotted in her locks.
  • ONE WHO LOVED NATURE
  • I
  • He was not learned in any art;
  • But Nature led him by the hand;
  • And spoke her language to his heart
  • So he could hear and understand:
  • He loved her simply as a child;
  • And in his love forgot the heat
  • Of conflict, and sat reconciled
  • In patience of defeat.
  • II
  • Before me now I see him rise--
  • A face, that seventy years had snowed
  • With winter, where the kind blue eyes
  • Like hospitable fires glowed:
  • A small gray man whose heart was large,
  • And big with knowledge learned of need;
  • A heart, the hard world made its targe,
  • That never ceased to bleed.
  • III
  • He knew all Nature. Yea, he knew
  • What virtue lay within each flower,
  • What tonic in the dawn and dew,
  • And in each root what magic power:
  • What in the wild witch-hazel tree
  • Reversed its time of blossoming,
  • And clothed its branches goldenly
  • In fall instead of spring.
  • IV
  • He knew what made the firefly glow
  • And pulse with crystal gold and flame;
  • And whence the bloodroot got its snow,
  • And how the bramble's perfume came:
  • He understood the water's word
  • And grasshopper's and cricket's chirr;
  • And of the music of each bird
  • He was interpreter.
  • V
  • He kept no calendar of days,
  • But knew the seasons by the flowers;
  • And he could tell you by the rays
  • Of sun or stars the very hours.
  • He probed the inner mysteries
  • Of light, and knew the chemic change
  • That colors flowers, and what is
  • Their fragrance wild and strange.
  • VI
  • If some old oak had power of speech,
  • It could not speak more wildwood lore,
  • Nor in experience further reach,
  • Than he who was a tree at core.
  • Nature was all his heritage,
  • And seemed to fill his every need;
  • Her features were his book, whose page
  • He never tired to read.
  • VII
  • He read her secrets that no man
  • Has ever read and never will,
  • And put to scorn the charlatan
  • Who botanizes of her still.
  • He kept his knowledge sweet and clean,
  • And questioned not of why and what;
  • And never drew a line between
  • What's known and what is not.
  • VIII
  • He was most gentle, good, and wise;
  • A simpler heart earth never saw:
  • His soul looked softly from his eyes,
  • And in his speech were love and awe.
  • Yet Nature in the end denied
  • The thing he had not asked for--fame!
  • Unknown, in poverty he died,
  • And men forget his name.
  • GARDEN GOSSIP
  • Thin, chisel-fine a cricket chipped
  • The crystal silence into sound;
  • And where the branches dreamed and dripped
  • A grasshopper its dagger stripped
  • And on the humming darkness ground.
  • A bat, against the gibbous moon,
  • Danced, implike, with its lone delight;
  • The glowworm scrawled a golden rune
  • Upon the dark; and, emerald-strewn,
  • The firefly hung with lamps the night.
  • The flowers said their beads in prayer,
  • Dew-syllables of sighed perfume;
  • Or talked of two, soft-standing there,
  • One like a gladiole, straight and fair,
  • And one like some rich poppy-bloom.
  • The mignonette and feverfew
  • Laid their pale brows together:--"See!"
  • One whispered: "Did their step thrill through
  • Your roots?"--"Like rain."--"I touched the two
  • And a new bud was born in me."
  • One rose said to another:--"Whose
  • Is this dim music? song, that parts
  • My crimson petals like the dews?"
  • "My blossom trembles with sweet news--
  • It is the love of two young hearts."
  • ASSUMPTION
  • I
  • A mile of moonlight and the whispering wood:
  • A mile of shadow and the odorous lane:
  • One large, white star above the solitude,
  • Like one sweet wish: and, laughter after pain,
  • Wild-roses wistful in a web of rain.
  • II
  • No star, no rose, to lesson him and lead;
  • No woodsman compass of the skies and rocks,--
  • Tattooed of stars and lichens,--doth love need
  • To guide him where, among the hollyhocks,
  • A blur of moonlight, gleam his sweetheart's locks.
  • III
  • We name it beauty--that permitted part,
  • The love-elected apotheosis
  • Of Nature, which the god within the heart,
  • Just touching, makes immortal, but by this--
  • A star, a rose, the memory of a kiss.
  • SENORITA
  • An agate-black, your roguish eyes
  • Claim no proud lineage of the skies,
  • No starry blue; but of good earth
  • The reckless witchery and mirth.
  • Looped in your raven hair's repose,
  • A hot aroma, one red rose
  • Dies; envious of that loveliness,
  • By being near which its is less.
  • Twin sea shells, hung with pearls, your ears,
  • Whose slender rosiness appears
  • Part of the pearls; whose pallid fire
  • Binds the attention these inspire.
  • One slim hand crumples up the lace
  • About your bosom's swelling grace;
  • A ruby at your samite throat
  • Lends the required color note.
  • The moon bears through the violet night
  • A pearly urn of chaliced light;
  • And from your dark-railed balcony
  • You stoop and wave your fan at me.
  • O'er orange orchards and the rose
  • Vague, odorous lips the south wind blows,
  • Peopling the night with whispers of
  • Romance and palely passionate love.
  • The heaven of your balcony
  • Smiles down two stars, that say to me
  • More peril than Angelica
  • Wrought with her beauty in Cathay.
  • Oh, stoop to me! and, speaking, reach
  • My soul like song that learned sweet speech
  • From some dim instrument--who knows?--
  • Or flower, a dulcimer or rose.
  • OVERSEAS
  • _Non numero horas nisi serenas_
  • When Fall drowns morns in mist, it seems
  • In soul I am a part of it;
  • A portion of its humid beams,
  • A form of fog, I seem to flit
  • From dreams to dreams....
  • An old chĆ¢teau sleeps 'mid the hills
  • Of France: an avenue of sorbs
  • Conceals it: drifts of daffodils
  • Bloom by a 'scutcheoned gate with barbs
  • Like iron bills.
  • I pass the gate unquestioned; yet,
  • I feel, announced. Broad holm-oaks make
  • Dark pools of restless violet.
  • Between high bramble banks a lake,--
  • As in a net
  • The tangled scales twist silver,--shines....
  • Gray, mossy turrets swell above
  • A sea of leaves. And where the pines
  • Shade ivied walls, there lies my love,
  • My heart divines.
  • I know her window, slimly seen
  • From distant lanes with hawthorn hedged:
  • Her garden, with the nectarine
  • Espaliered, and the peach tree, wedged
  • 'Twixt walls of green.
  • Cool-babbling a fountain falls
  • From gryphons' mouths in porphyry;
  • Carp haunt its waters; and white balls
  • Of lilies dip it when the bee
  • Creeps in and drawls.
  • And butterflies--each with a face
  • Of faery on its wings--that seem
  • Beheaded pansies, softly chase
  • Each other down the gloom and gleam
  • Trees interspace.
  • And roses! roses, soft as vair,
  • Round sylvan statues and the old
  • Stone dial--Pompadours, that wear
  • Their royalty of purple and gold
  • With wanton air....
  • Her scarf, her lute, whose ribbons breathe
  • The perfume of her touch; her gloves,
  • Modeling the daintiness they sheathe;
  • Her fan, a Watteau, gay with loves,
  • Lie there beneath
  • A bank of eglantine, that heaps
  • A rose-strewn shadow.--NaĆÆve-eyed,
  • With lips as suave as they, she sleeps;
  • The romance by her, open wide,
  • O'er which she weeps.
  • PROBLEMS
  • Man's are the learnings of his books--
  • What is all knowledge that he knows
  • Beside the wit of winding brooks,
  • The wisdom of the summer rose!
  • How soil distills the scent in flowers
  • Baffles his science: heaven-dyed,
  • How, from the palette of His hours,
  • God gives them colors, hath defied.
  • What dream of heaven begets the light?
  • Or, ere the stars beat burning tunes,
  • Stains all the hollow edge of night
  • With glory as of molten moons?
  • Who is it answers what is birth
  • Or death, that nothing may retard?
  • Or what is love, that seems of Earth,
  • Yet wears God's own divine regard?
  • TO A WINDFLOWER
  • I
  • Teach me the secret of thy loveliness,
  • That, being made wise, I may aspire to be
  • As beautiful in thought, and so express
  • Immortal truths to Earth's mortality;
  • Though to my soul ability be less
  • Than 'tis to thee, O sweet anemone.
  • II
  • Teach me the secret of thy innocence,
  • That in simplicity I may grow wise;
  • Asking of Art no other recompense
  • Than the approval of her own just eyes;
  • So may I rise to some fair eminence,
  • Though less than thine, O cousin of the skies.
  • III
  • Teach me these things; through whose high knowledge, I,--
  • When Death hath poured oblivion through my veins,
  • And brought me home, as all are brought, to lie
  • In that vast house, common to serfs and thanes,--
  • I shall not die, I shall not utterly die,
  • For beauty born of beauty--_that_ remains.
  • VOYAGERS
  • Where are they, that song and tale
  • Tell of? lands our childhood knew?
  • Sea-locked Faerylands that trail
  • Morning summits, dim with dew,
  • Crimson o'er a crimson sail.
  • Where in dreams we entered on
  • Wonders eyes have never seen:
  • Whither often we have gone,
  • Sailing a dream-brigantine
  • On from voyaging dawn to dawn.
  • Leons seeking lands of song;
  • Fabled fountains pouring spray;
  • Where our anchors dropped among
  • Corals of some tropic bay,
  • With its swarthy native throng.
  • Shoulder ax and arquebus!--
  • We may find it!--past yon range
  • Of sierras, vaporous,
  • Rich with gold and wild and strange
  • That lost region dear to us.
  • Yet, behold, although our zeal
  • Darien summits may subdue,
  • Our Balboa eyes reveal
  • But a vaster sea come to--
  • New endeavor for our keel.
  • Yet! who sails with face set hard
  • Westward,--while behind him lies
  • Unfaith,--where his dreams keep guard
  • Round it, in the sunset skies,
  • He may reach it--afterward.
  • THE SPELL
  • _"We have the receipt of fern seed: we walk invisible."_
  • --HENRY IV
  • And we have met but twice or thrice!--
  • Three times enough to make me love!--
  • I praised your hair once; then your glove;
  • Your eyes; your gown;--you were like ice;
  • And yet this might suffice, my love,
  • And yet this might suffice.
  • St. John hath told me what to do:
  • To search and find the ferns that grow
  • The fern seed that the faeries know;
  • Then sprinkle fern seed in my shoe,
  • And haunt the steps of you, my dear,
  • And haunt the steps of you.
  • You'll see the poppy pods dip here;
  • The blow-ball of the thistle slip,
  • And no wind breathing--but my lip
  • Next to your anxious cheek and ear,
  • To tell you I am near, my love,
  • To tell you I am near.
  • On wood-ways I shall tread your gown--
  • You'll know it is no brier!--then
  • I'll whisper words of love again,
  • And smile to see your quick face frown:
  • And then I'll kiss it down, my dear,
  • And then I'll kiss it down.
  • And when at home you read or knit,--
  • Who'll know it was my hands that blotted
  • The page?--or all your needles knotted?
  • When in your rage you cry a bit:
  • And loud I laugh at it, my love,
  • And loud I laugh at it.
  • The secrets that you say in prayer
  • Right so I'll hear: and, when you sing,
  • The name you speak; and whispering
  • I'll bend and kiss your mouth and hair,
  • And tell you I am there, my dear,
  • And tell you I am there.
  • Would it were true what people say!--
  • Would I _could_ find that elfin seed!
  • Then should I win your love, indeed,
  • By being near you night and day--
  • There is no other way, my love,
  • There is no other way.
  • Meantime the truth in this is said:
  • It is my soul that follows you;
  • It needs no fern seed in the shoe,--
  • While in the heart love pulses red,
  • To win you and to wed, my dear,
  • To win you and to wed.
  • UNCERTAINTY
  • _"'He cometh not,' she said."_--MARIANA
  • It will not be to-day and yet
  • I think and dream it will; and let
  • The slow uncertainty devise
  • So many sweet excuses, met
  • With the old doubt in hope's disguise.
  • The panes were sweated with the dawn;
  • Yet through their dimness, shriveled drawn,
  • The aigret of one princess-feather,
  • One monk's-hood tuft with oilets wan,
  • I glimpsed, dead in the slaying weather.
  • This morning, when my window's chintz
  • I drew, how gray the day was!--Since
  • I saw him, yea, all days are gray!--
  • I gazed out on my dripping quince,
  • Defruited, gnarled; then turned away
  • To weep, but did not weep: but felt
  • A colder anguish than did melt
  • About the tearful-visaged year!--
  • Then flung the lattice wide, and smelt
  • The autumn sorrow: Rotting near
  • The rain-drenched sunflowers bent and bleached,
  • Up which the frost-nipped gourd-vines reached
  • And morning-glories, seeded o'er
  • With ashen aiglets; whence beseeched
  • One last bloom, frozen to the core.
  • The podded hollyhocks,--that Fall
  • Had stripped of finery,--by the wall
  • Rustled their tatters; dripped and dripped,
  • The fog thick on them: near them, all
  • The tarnished, haglike zinnias tipped.
  • I felt the death and loved it: yea,
  • To have it nearer, sought the gray,
  • Chill, fading garth. Yet could not weep,
  • But wandered in an aimless way,
  • And sighed with weariness for sleep.
  • Mine were the fog, the frosty stalks;
  • The weak lights on the leafy walks;
  • The shadows shivering with the cold;
  • The breaking heart; the lonely talks;
  • The last, dim, ruined marigold.
  • But when to-night the moon swings low--
  • A great marsh-marigold of glow--
  • And all my garden with the sea
  • Moans, then, through moon and mist, I know
  • My love will come to comfort me.
  • IN THE WOOD
  • The waterfall, deep in the wood,
  • Talked drowsily with solitude,
  • A soft, insistent sound of foam,
  • That filled with sleep the forest's dome,
  • Where, like some dream of dusk, she stood
  • Accentuating solitude.
  • The crickets' tinkling chips of sound
  • Strewed dim the twilight-twinkling ground;
  • A whippoorwill began to cry,
  • And glimmering through the sober sky
  • A bat went on its drunken round,
  • Its shadow following on the ground.
  • Then from a bush, an elder-copse,
  • That spiced the dark with musky tops,
  • What seemed, at first, a shadow came
  • And took her hand and spoke her name,
  • And kissed her where, in starry drops,
  • The dew orbed on the elder-tops.
  • The glaucous glow of fireflies
  • Flickered the dusk; and foxlike eyes
  • Peered from the shadows; and the hush
  • Murmured a word of wind and rush
  • Of fluttering waters, fragrant sighs,
  • And dreams unseen of mortal eyes.
  • The beetle flung its burr of sound
  • Against the hush and clung there, wound
  • In night's deep mane: then, in a tree,
  • A grig began deliberately
  • To file the stillness: all around
  • A wire of shrillness seemed unwound.
  • I looked for those two lovers there;
  • His ardent eyes, her passionate hair.
  • The moon looked down, slow-climbing wan
  • Heaven's slope of azure: they were gone:
  • But where they'd passed I heard the air
  • Sigh, faint with sweetness of her hair.
  • SINCE THEN
  • I found myself among the trees
  • What time the reapers ceased to reap;
  • And in the sunflower-blooms the bees
  • Huddled brown heads and went to sleep,
  • Rocked by the balsam-breathing breeze.
  • I saw the red fox leave his lair,
  • A shaggy shadow, on the knoll;
  • And tunneling his thoroughfare
  • Beneath the soil, I watched the mole--
  • Stealth's own self could not take more care.
  • I heard the death-moth tick and stir,
  • Slow-honeycombing through the bark;
  • I heard the cricket's drowsy chirr,
  • And one lone beetle burr the dark--
  • The sleeping woodland seemed to purr.
  • And then the moon rose: and one white
  • Low bough of blossoms--grown almost
  • Where, ere you died, 'twas our delight
  • To meet,--dear heart!--I thought your ghost....
  • The wood is haunted since that night.
  • DUSK IN THE WOODS
  • Three miles of trees it is: and I
  • Came through the woods that waited, dumb,
  • For the cool summer dusk to come;
  • And lingered there to watch the sky
  • Up which the gradual splendor clomb.
  • A tree-toad quavered in a tree;
  • And then a sudden whippoorwill
  • Called overhead, so wildly shrill
  • The sleeping wood, it seemed to me,
  • Cried out and then again was still.
  • Then through dark boughs its stealthy flight
  • An owl took; and, at drowsy strife,
  • The cricket tuned its faery fife;
  • And like a ghost-flower, silent white,
  • The wood-moth glimmered into life.
  • And in the dead wood everywhere
  • The insects ticked, or bored below
  • The rotted bark; and, glow on glow,
  • The lambent fireflies here and there
  • Lit up their jack-o'-lantern show.
  • I heard a vesper-sparrow sing,
  • Withdrawn, it seemed, into the far
  • Slow sunset's tranquil cinnabar;
  • The crimson, softly smoldering
  • Behind the trees, with its one star.
  • A dog barked: and down ways that gleamed,
  • Through dew and clover, faint the noise
  • Of cowbells moved. And then a voice,
  • That sang a-milking, so it seemed,
  • Made glad my heart as some glad boy's.
  • And then the lane: and, full in view,
  • A farmhouse with its rose-grown gate,
  • And honeysuckle paths, await
  • For night, the moon, and love and you--
  • These are the things that made me late.
  • PATHS
  • I
  • What words of mine can tell the spell
  • Of garden ways I know so well?--
  • The path that takes me in the spring
  • Past quince-trees where the bluebirds sing,
  • And peonies are blossoming,
  • Unto a porch, wistaria-hung,
  • Around whose steps May-lilies blow,
  • A fair girl reaches down among,
  • Her arm more white than their sweet snow.
  • II
  • What words of mine can tell the spell
  • Of garden ways I know so well?--
  • Another path that leads me, when
  • The summer time is here again,
  • Past hollyhocks that shame the west
  • When the red sun has sunk to rest;
  • To roses bowering a nest,
  • A lattice, 'neath which mignonette
  • And deep geraniums surge and sough,
  • Where, in the twilight, starless yet,
  • A fair girl's eyes are stars enough.
  • III
  • What words of mine can tell the spell
  • Of garden ways I know so well?--
  • A path that takes me, when the days
  • Of autumn wrap the hills in haze,
  • Beneath the pippin-pelting tree,
  • 'Mid flitting butterfly and bee;
  • Unto a door where, fiery,
  • The creeper climbs; and, garnet-hued,
  • The cock's-comb and the dahlia flare,
  • And in the door, where shades intrude,
  • Gleams bright a fair girl's sunbeam hair.
  • IV
  • What words of mine can tell the spell
  • Of garden ways I know so well?--
  • A path that brings me through the frost
  • Of winter, when the moon is tossed
  • In clouds; beneath great cedars, weak
  • With shaggy snow; past shrubs blown bleak
  • With shivering leaves; to eaves that leak
  • The tattered ice, whereunder is
  • A fire-flickering window-space;
  • And in the light, with lips to kiss,
  • A fair girl's welcome-smiling face.
  • THE QUEST
  • I
  • First I asked the honeybee,
  • Busy in the balmy bowers;
  • Saying, "Sweetheart, tell it me:
  • Have you seen her, honeybee?
  • She is cousin to the flowers--
  • All the sweetness of the south
  • In her wild-rose face and mouth."
  • But the bee passed silently.
  • II
  • Then I asked the forest bird,
  • Warbling by the woodland waters;
  • Saying, "Dearest, have you heard?
  • Have you heard her, forest bird?
  • She is one of music's daughters--
  • Never song so sweet by half
  • As the music of her laugh."
  • But the bird said not a word.
  • III
  • Next I asked the evening sky,
  • Hanging out its lamps of fire;
  • Saying, "Loved one, passed she by?
  • Tell me, tell me, evening sky!
  • She, the star of my desire--
  • Sister whom the Pleiads lost,
  • And my soul's high pentecost."
  • But the sky made no reply.
  • IV
  • Where is she? ah, where is she?
  • She to whom both love and duty
  • Bind me, yea, immortally.--
  • Where is she? ah, where is she?
  • Symbol of the Earth-Soul's beauty.
  • I have lost her. Help my heart
  • Find her! her, who is a part
  • Of the pagan soul of me.
  • THE GARDEN OF DREAMS
  • Not while I live may I forget
  • That garden which my spirit trod!
  • Where dreams were flowers, wild and wet,
  • And beautiful as God.
  • Not while I breathe, awake, adream,
  • Shall live again for me those hours,
  • When, in its mystery and gleam,
  • I met her 'mid the flowers.
  • Eyes, talismanic heliotrope,
  • Beneath mesmeric lashes, where
  • The sorceries of love and hope
  • Had made a shining lair.
  • And daydawn brows, whereover hung
  • The twilight of dark locks: wild birds,
  • Her lips, that spoke the rose's tongue
  • Of fragrance-voweled words.
  • I will not tell of cheeks and chin,
  • That held me as sweet language holds;
  • Nor of the eloquence within
  • Her breasts' twin-moonĆ©d molds.
  • Nor of her body's languorous
  • Wind-grace, that glanced like starlight through
  • Her clinging robe's diaphanous
  • Web of the mist and dew.
  • There is no star so pure and high
  • As was her look; no fragrance such
  • As her soft presence; and no sigh
  • Of music like her touch.
  • Not while I live may I forget
  • That garden of dim dreams, where I
  • And Beauty born of Music met,
  • Whose spirit passed me by.
  • THE PATH TO FAERY
  • I
  • When dusk falls cool as a rained-on rose,
  • And a tawny tower the twilight shows,
  • With the crescent moon, the silver moon, the curved
  • new moon in a space that glows,
  • A turret window that grows alight;
  • There is a path that my Fancy knows,
  • A glimmering, shimmering path of night,
  • That far as the Land of Faery goes.
  • II
  • And I follow the path, as Fancy leads,
  • Over the mountains, into the meads,
  • Where the firefly cities, the glowworm cities, the faery
  • cities are strung like beads,
  • Each city a twinkling star:
  • And I live a life of valorous deeds,
  • And march with the Faery King to war,
  • And ride with his knights on milk-white steeds.
  • III
  • Or it's there in the whirl of their life I sit,
  • Or dance in their houses with starlight lit,
  • Their blossom houses, their flower houses, their elfin
  • houses, of fern leaves knit,
  • With fronded spires and domes:
  • And there it is that my lost dreams flit,
  • And the ghost of my childhood, smiling, roams
  • With the faery children so dear to it.
  • IV
  • And it's there I hear that they all come true,
  • The faery stories, whatever they do--
  • Elf and goblin, dear elf and goblin, loved elf and goblin,
  • and all the crew
  • Of witch and wizard and gnome and fay,
  • And prince and princess, that wander through
  • The storybooks we have put away,
  • The faerytales that we loved and knew.
  • V
  • The face of Adventure lures you there,
  • And the eyes of Danger bid you dare,
  • While ever the bugles, the silver bugles, the far-off
  • bugles of Elfland blare,
  • The faery trumpets to battle blow;
  • And you feel their thrill in your heart and hair,
  • And you fain would follow and mount and go
  • And march with the Faeries anywhere.
  • VI
  • And she--she rides at your side again,
  • Your little sweetheart whose age is ten:
  • She is the princess, the faery princess, the princess fair
  • that you worshiped when
  • You were a prince in a faerytale;
  • And you do great deeds as you did them then,
  • With your magic spear, and enchanted mail,
  • Braving the dragon in his den.
  • VII
  • And you ask again,--"Oh, where shall we ride,
  • Now that the monster is slain, my bride?"--
  • "Back to the cities, the firefly cities, the glowworm
  • cities where we can hide,
  • The beautiful cities of Faeryland.
  • And the light of my eyes shall be your guide,
  • The light of my eyes and my snow-white hand--
  • And there forever we two will abide."
  • THERE ARE FAERIES
  • I
  • There are faeries, bright of eye,
  • Who the wildflowers' warders are:
  • Ouphes, that chase the firefly;
  • Elves, that ride the shooting-star:
  • Fays, who in a cobweb lie,
  • Swinging on a moonbeam bar;
  • Or who harness bumblebees,
  • Grumbling on the clover leas,
  • To a blossom or a breeze--
  • That's their faery car.
  • If you care, you too may see
  • There are faeries.--Verily,
  • There are faeries.
  • II
  • There are faeries. I could swear
  • I have seen them busy, where
  • Roses loose their scented hair,
  • In the moonlight weaving, weaving,
  • Out of starlight and the dew,
  • Glinting gown and shimmering shoe;
  • Or, within a glowworm lair,
  • From the dark earth slowly heaving
  • Mushrooms whiter than the moon,
  • On whose tops they sit and croon,
  • With their grig-like mandolins,
  • To fair faery ladykins,
  • Leaning from the windowsill
  • Of a rose or daffodil,
  • Listening to their serenade
  • All of cricket-music made.
  • Follow me, oh, follow me!
  • Ho! away to FaĆ«rie!
  • Where your eyes like mine may see
  • There are faeries.--Verily,
  • There are faeries.
  • III
  • There are faeries. Elves that swing
  • In a wild and rainbow ring
  • Through the air; or mount the wing
  • Of a bat to courier news
  • To the faery King and Queen:
  • Fays, who stretch the gossamers
  • On which twilight hangs the dews;
  • Who, within the moonlight sheen,
  • Whisper dimly in the ears
  • Of the flowers words so sweet
  • That their hearts are turned to musk
  • And to honey; things that beat
  • In their veins of gold and blue:
  • Ouphes, that shepherd moths of dusk--
  • Soft of wing and gray of hue--
  • Forth to pasture on the dew.
  • IV
  • There are faeries; verily;
  • Verily:
  • For the old owl in the tree,
  • Hollow tree,
  • He who maketh melody
  • For them tripping merrily,
  • Told it me.
  • There are faeries.--Verily,
  • There are faeries.
  • 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 limpid 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,
  • Where her eyes may drowse or her beauty 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 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,
  • And, starry-whist, through the dark she slips:
  • While the heavenly dream of her soul makes gleam
  • The falls that stream and the foam that races,
  • As wrapped in the deeps of the wild she sleeps,
  • She dripping sleeps or starward gazes.
  • IN A GARDEN
  • The pink rose drops its petals on
  • The moonlit lawn, the moonlit lawn;
  • The moon, like some wide rose of white,
  • Drops down the summer night.
  • No rose there is
  • As sweet as this--
  • Thy mouth, that greets me with a kiss.
  • The lattice of thy casement twines
  • With jasmine vines, with jasmine vines;
  • The stars, like jasmine blossoms, lie
  • About the glimmering sky.
  • No jasmine tress
  • Can so caress
  • Like thy white arms' soft loveliness.
  • About thy door magnolia blooms
  • Make sweet the glooms, make sweet the glooms;
  • A moon-magnolia is the dusk
  • Closed in a dewy husk.
  • However much,
  • No bloom gives such
  • Soft fragrance as thy bosom's touch.
  • The flowers blooming now will pass,
  • And strew the grass, and strew the grass;
  • The night, like some frail flower, dawn
  • Will soon make gray and wan.
  • Still, still above,
  • The flower of
  • True love shall live forever, Love.
  • 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 sweet 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 muskmelons split with sweet;
  • And the moon is a light in Heaven's house,
  • And summer has spent its heat--
  • It's oh, for the lane, the trysting lane,
  • The deep-mooned night and her love again!
  • THE WINDOW ON THE HILL
  • Among the fields the camomile
  • Seems blown mist in the lightning's glare:
  • Cool, rainy odors drench the air;
  • Night speaks above; the angry smile
  • Of storm within her stare.
  • The way that I shall take to-night
  • Is through the wood whose branches fill
  • The road with double darkness, till,
  • Between the boughs, a window's light
  • Shines out upon the hill.
  • The fence; and then the path that goes
  • Around a trailer-tangled rock,
  • Through puckered pink and hollyhock,
  • Unto a latch-gate's unkempt rose,
  • And door whereat I knock.
  • Bright on the oldtime flower place
  • The lamp streams through the foggy pane;
  • The door is opened to the rain:
  • And in the door--her happy face
  • And outstretched arms again.
  • THE PICTURE
  • Above her, pearl and rose the heavens lay:
  • Around her, flowers flattered earth with gold,
  • Or down the path in insolence held sway--
  • Like cavaliers who ride the king's highway--
  • Scarlet and buff, within a garden old.
  • Beyond the hills, faint-heard through belts of wood,
  • Bells, Sabbath-sweet, swooned from some far-off town:
  • Gamboge and gold, broad sunset colors strewed
  • The purple west as if, with God imbued,
  • Her mighty palette Nature there laid down.
  • Amid such flowers, underneath such skies,
  • Embodying all life knows of sweet and fair,
  • She stood; love's dreams in girlhood's face and eyes,
  • Fair as a star that comes to emphasize
  • The mingled beauty of the earth and air.
  • Behind her, seen through vines and orchard trees,
  • Gray with its twinkling windows--like the face
  • Of calm old age that sits and dreams at ease--
  • Porched with old roses, haunts of honeybees,
  • The homestead loomed within a lilied space.
  • For whom she waited in the afterglow,
  • Star-eyed and golden 'mid the poppy and rose,
  • I do not know; I do not care to know,--
  • It is enough I keep her picture so,
  • Hung up, like poetry, in my life's dull prose.
  • A fragrant picture, where I still may find
  • Her face untouched of sorrow or regret,
  • Unspoiled of contact; ever young and kind;
  • The spiritual sweetheart of my soul and mind,
  • She had not been, perhaps, if we had met.
  • MOLY
  • When by the wall the tiger-flower swings
  • A head of sultry slumber and aroma;
  • And by the path, whereon the blown rose flings
  • Its obsolete beauty, the long lilies foam a
  • White place of perfume, like a beautiful breast--
  • Between the pansy fire of the west,
  • And poppy mist of moonrise in the east,
  • This heartache will have ceased.
  • The witchcraft of soft music and sweet sleep--
  • Let it beguile the burthen from my spirit,
  • And white dreams reap me as strong reapers reap
  • The ripened grain and full blown blossom near it;
  • Let me behold how gladness gives the whole
  • The transformed countenance of my own soul--
  • Between the sunset and the risen moon
  • Let sorrow vanish soon.
  • And these things then shall keep me company:
  • The elfins of the dew; the spirit of laughter
  • Who haunts the wind; the god of melody
  • Who sings within the stream, that reaches after
  • The flow'rs that rock themselves to his caress:
  • These of themselves shall shape my happiness,
  • Whose visible presence I shall lean upon,
  • Feeling that care is gone.
  • Forgetting how the cankered flower must die;
  • The worm-pierced fruit fall, sicklied to its syrup;
  • How joy, begotten 'twixt a sigh and sigh,
  • Waits with one foot forever in the stirrup,--
  • Remembering how within the hollow lute
  • Soft music sleeps when music's voice is mute;
  • And in the heart, when all seems black despair,
  • Hope sits, awaiting there.
  • POPPY AND MANDRAGORA
  • Let us go far from here!
  • Here there is sadness in the early year:
  • Here sorrow waits where joy went laughing late:
  • The sicklied face of heaven hangs like hate
  • Above the woodland and the meadowland;
  • And Spring hath taken fire in her hand
  • Of frost and made a dead bloom of her face,
  • Which was a flower of marvel once and grace,
  • And sweet serenity and stainless glow.
  • Delay not. Let us go.
  • Let us go far away
  • Into the sunrise of a fairer May:
  • Where all the nights resign them to the moon,
  • And drug their souls with odor and soft tune,
  • And tell their dreams in starlight: where the hours
  • Teach immortality with fadeless flowers;
  • And all the day the bee weights down the bloom,
  • And all the night the moth shakes strange perfume,
  • Like music, from the flower-bells' affluence.
  • Let us go far from hence.
  • Why should we sit and weep,
  • And yearn with heavy eyelids still to sleep?
  • Forever hiding from our hearts the hate,--
  • Death within death,--life doth accumulate,
  • Like winter snows along the barren leas
  • And sterile hills, whereon no lover sees
  • The crocus limn the beautiful in flame;
  • Or hyacinth and jonquil write the name
  • Of Love in fire, for each passer-by.
  • Why should we sit and sigh?
  • We will not stay and long,
  • Here where our souls are wasting for a song;
  • Where no bird sings; and, dim beneath the stars,
  • No silvery water strikes melodious bars;
  • And in the rocks and forest-covered hills
  • No quick-tongued echo from her grotto fills
  • With eery syllables the solitude--
  • The vocal image of the voice that wooed--
  • She, of wild sounds the airy looking-glass.
  • Our souls are tired, alas!
  • What should we say to her?--
  • To Spring, who in our hearts makes no sweet stir:
  • Who looks not on us nor gives thought unto:
  • Too busy with the birth of flowers and dew,
  • And vague gold wings within the chrysalis;
  • Or Love, who will not miss us; had no kiss
  • To give your soul or the sad soul of me,
  • Who bound our hearts to her in poesy,
  • Long since, and wear her badge of service still.--
  • Have we not served our fill?
  • We will go far away.
  • Song will not care, who slays our souls each day
  • With the dark daggers of denying eyes,
  • And lips of silence! ... Had she sighed us lies,
  • Not passionate, yet falsely tremulous,
  • And lent her mouth to ours in mockery; thus
  • Smiled from calm eyes as if appreciative;
  • Then, then our love had taught itself to live
  • Feeding itself on hope, and recompense.
  • But no!--So let us hence.
  • So be the Bible shut
  • Of all her Beauty, and her wisdom but
  • A clasp for memory! We will not seek
  • The light that came not when the soul was weak
  • With longing, and the darkness gave no sign
  • Of star-born comfort. Nay! why kneel and whine
  • Sad psalms of patience and hosannas of
  • Old hope and dreary canticles of love?--
  • Let us depart, since, as we long supposed,
  • For us God's book was closed.
  • A ROAD SONG
  • It's--Oh, for the hills, where the wind's some one
  • With a vagabond foot that follows!
  • And a cheer-up hand that he claps upon
  • Your arm with the hearty words, "Come on!
  • We'll soon be out of the hollows,
  • My heart!
  • We'll soon be out of the hollows."
  • It's--Oh, for the songs, where the hope's some one
  • With a renegade foot that doubles!
  • And a jolly lilt that he flings to the sun
  • As he turns with the friendly laugh, "Come on!
  • We'll soon be out of the troubles,
  • My heart!
  • We'll soon be out of the troubles!"
  • PHANTOMS
  • This was her home; one mossy gable thrust
  • Above the cedars and the locust trees:
  • This was her home, whose beauty now is dust,
  • A lonely memory for melodies
  • The wild birds sing, the wild birds and the bees.
  • Here every evening is a prayer: no boast
  • Or ruin of sunset makes the wan world wroth;
  • Here, through the twilight, like a pale flower's ghost,
  • A drowsy flutter, flies the tiger-moth;
  • And dusk spreads darkness like a dewy cloth.
  • In vagabond velvet, on the placid day,
  • A stain of crimson, lolls the butterfly;
  • The south wind sows with ripple and with ray
  • The pleasant waters; and the gentle sky
  • Looks on the homestead like a quiet eye.
  • Their melancholy quaver, lone and low,
  • When day is done, the gray tree-toads repeat:
  • The whippoorwills, far in the afterglow,
  • Complain to silence: and the lightnings beat,
  • In one still cloud, glimmers of golden heat.
  • He comes not yet: not till the dusk is dead,
  • And all the western glow is far withdrawn;
  • Not till,--a sleepy mouth love's kiss makes red,--
  • The baby bud opes in a rosy yawn,
  • Breathing sweet guesses at the dreamed-of dawn.
  • When in the shadows, like a rain of gold,
  • The fireflies stream steadily; and bright
  • Along the moss the glowworm, as of old,
  • A crawling sparkle--like a crooked light
  • In smoldering vellum--scrawls a square of night,--
  • Then will he come; and she will lean to him,--
  • She,--the sweet phantom,--memory of that place,--
  • Between the starlight and his eyes; so dim
  • With suave control and soul-compelling grace,
  • He cannot help but speak her, face to face.
  • INTIMATIONS OF THE BEAUTIFUL
  • I
  • The hills are full of prophecies
  • And ancient voices of the dead;
  • Of hidden shapes that no man sees,
  • Pale, visionary presences,
  • That speak the things no tongue hath said,
  • No mind hath thought, no eye hath read.
  • The streams are full of oracles,
  • And momentary whisperings;
  • An immaterial beauty swells
  • Its breezy silver o'er the shells
  • With wordless speech that sings and sings
  • The message of diviner things.
  • No indeterminable thought is theirs,
  • The stars', the sunsets' and the flowers';
  • Whose inexpressible speech declares
  • Th' immortal Beautiful, who shares
  • This mortal riddle which is ours,
  • Beyond the forward-flying hours.
  • II
  • It holds and beckons in the streams;
  • It lures and touches us in all
  • The flowers of the golden fall--
  • The mystic essence of our dreams:
  • A nymph blows bubbling music where
  • Faint water ripples down the rocks;
  • A faun goes dancing hoiden locks,
  • And piping a Pandean air,
  • Through trees the instant wind shakes bare.
  • Our dreams are never otherwise
  • Than real when they hold us so;
  • We in some future life shall know
  • Them parts of it and recognize
  • Them as ideal substance, whence
  • The actual is--(as flowers and trees,
  • From color sources no one sees,
  • Draw dyes, the substance of a sense)--
  • Material with intelligence.
  • III
  • What intimations made them wise,
  • The mournful pine, the pleasant beech?
  • What strange and esoteric speech?--
  • (Communicated from the skies
  • In runic whispers)--that invokes
  • The boles that sleep within the seeds,
  • And out of narrow darkness leads
  • The vast assemblies of the oaks.
  • Within his knowledge, what one reads
  • The poems written by the flowers?
  • The sermons, past all speech of ours,
  • Preached by the gospel of the weeds?--
  • O eloquence of coloring!
  • O thoughts of syllabled perfume!
  • O beauty uttered into bloom!
  • Teach me your language! let me sing!
  • IV
  • Along my mind flies suddenly
  • A wildwood thought that will not die;
  • That makes me brother to the bee,
  • And cousin to the butterfly:
  • A thought, such as gives perfume to
  • The blushes of the bramble-rose,
  • And, fixed in quivering crystal, glows
  • A captive in the prismed dew.
  • It leads the feet no certain way;
  • No frequent path of human feet:
  • Its wild eyes follow me all day;
  • All day I hear its wild heart beat:
  • And in the night it sings and sighs
  • The songs the winds and waters love;
  • Its wild heart lying tranced above,
  • And tranced the wildness of its eyes.
  • V
  • Oh, joy, to walk the way that goes
  • Through woods of sweet-gum and of beech!
  • Where, like a ruby left in reach,
  • The berry of the dogwood glows:
  • Or where the bristling hillsides mass,
  • 'Twixt belts of tawny sassafras,
  • Brown shocks of corn in wigwam rows!
  • Where, in the hazy morning, runs
  • The stony branch that pools and drips,
  • The red-haws and the wild-rose hips
  • Are strewn like pebbles; and the sun's
  • Own gold seems captured by the weeds;
  • To see, through scintillating seeds,
  • The hunters steal with glimmering guns!
  • Oh, joy, to go the path which lies
  • Through woodlands where the trees are tall!
  • Beneath the misty moon of fall,
  • Whose ghostly girdle prophesies
  • A morn wind-swept and gray with rain;
  • When, o'er the lonely, leaf-blown lane,
  • The night-hawk like a dead leaf flies!
  • To stand within the dewy ring
  • Where pale death smites the boneset blooms,
  • And everlasting's flowers, and plumes
  • Of mint, with aromatic wing!
  • And hear the creek,--whose sobbing seems
  • A wild-man murmuring in his dreams,--
  • And insect violins that sing.
  • Or where the dim persimmon tree
  • Rains on the path its frosty fruit,
  • And in the oak the owl doth hoot,
  • Beneath the moon and mist, to see
  • The outcast Year go,--Hagar-wise,--
  • With far-off, melancholy eyes,
  • And lips that sigh for sympathy.
  • VI
  • Towards evening, where the sweet-gum flung
  • Its thorny balls among the weeds,
  • And where the milkweed's sleepy seeds,--
  • A faery Feast of Lanterns,--swung;
  • The cricket tuned a plaintive lyre,
  • And o'er the hills the sunset hung
  • A purple parchment scrawled with fire.
  • From silver-blue to amethyst
  • The shadows deepened in the vale;
  • And belt by belt the pearly-pale
  • Aladdin fabric of the mist
  • Built up its exhalation far;
  • A jewel on an Afrit's wrist,
  • One star gemmed sunset's cinnabar.
  • Then night drew near, as when, alone,
  • The heart and soul grow intimate;
  • And on the hills the twilight sate
  • With shadows, whose wild robes were sown
  • With dreams and whispers;--dreams, that led
  • The heart once with love's monotone,
  • And memories of the living-dead.
  • VII
  • All night the rain-gusts shook the leaves
  • Around my window; and the blast
  • Rumbled the flickering flue, and fast
  • The storm streamed from the dripping eaves.
  • As if--'neath skies gone mad with fear--
  • The witches' Sabboth galloped past,
  • The forests leapt like startled deer.
  • All night I heard the sweeping sleet;
  • And when the morning came, as slow
  • As wan affliction, with the woe
  • Of all the world dragged at her feet,
  • No spear of purple shattered through
  • The dark gray of the east; no bow
  • Of gold shot arrows swift and blue.
  • But rain, that whipped the windows; filled
  • The spouts with rushings; and around
  • The garden stamped, and sowed the ground
  • With limbs and leaves; the wood-pool filled
  • With overgurgling.--Bleak and cold
  • The fields looked, where the footpath wound
  • Through teasel and bur-marigold.
  • Yet there's a kindness in such days
  • Of gloom, that doth console regret
  • With sympathy of tears, which wet
  • Old eyes that watch the back-log blaze.--
  • A kindness, alien to the deep
  • Glad blue of sunny days that let
  • No thought in of the lives that weep.
  • VIII
  • This dawn, through which the Autumn glowers,--
  • As might a face within our sleep,
  • With stone-gray eyes that weep and weep,
  • And wet brows bound with sodden flowers,--
  • Is sunset to some sister land;
  • A land of ruins and of palms;
  • Rich sunset, crimson with long calms,--
  • Whose burning belt low mountains bar,--
  • That sees some brown Rebecca stand
  • Beside a well the camel-band
  • Winds down to 'neath the evening star.
  • O sunset, sister to this dawn!
  • O dawn, whose face is turned away!
  • Who gazest not upon this day,
  • But back upon the day that's gone!
  • Enamored so of loveliness,
  • The retrospect of what thou wast,
  • Oh, to thyself the present trust!
  • And as thy past be beautiful
  • With hues, that never can grow less!
  • Waiting thy pleasure to express
  • New beauty lest the world grow dull.
  • IX
  • Down in the woods a sorcerer,
  • Out of rank rain and death, distills,--
  • Through chill alembics of the air,--
  • Aromas that brood everywhere
  • Among the whisper-haunted hills:
  • The bitter myrrh of dead leaves fills
  • Wet valleys (where the gaunt weeds bleach)
  • With rainy scents of wood-decay;--
  • As if a spirit all the day
  • Sat breathing softly 'neath the beech.
  • With other eyes I see her flit,
  • The wood-witch of the wild perfumes,
  • Among her elfin owls,--that sit,
  • A drowsy white, in crescent-lit
  • Dim glens of opalescent glooms:--
  • Where, for her magic, buds and blooms
  • Mysterious perfumes, while she stands,
  • A thornlike shadow, summoning
  • The sleepy odors, that take wing
  • Like bubbles from her dewy hands.
  • X
  • Among the woods they call to me--
  • The lights that haunt the wood and stream;
  • Voices of such white ecstasy
  • As moves with hushed lips through a dream:
  • They stand in auraed radiances,
  • Or flash with nimbused limbs across
  • Their golden shadows on the moss,
  • Or slip in silver through the trees.
  • What love can give the heart in me
  • More hope and exaltation than
  • The hand of light that tips the tree
  • And beckons far from marts of man?
  • That reaches foamy fingers through
  • The broken ripple, and replies
  • With sparkling speech of lips and eyes
  • To souls who seek and still pursue.
  • XI
  • Give me the streams, that counterfeit
  • The twilight of autumnal skies;
  • The shadowy, silent waters, lit
  • With fire like a woman's eyes!
  • Slow waters that, in autumn, glass
  • The scarlet-strewn and golden grass,
  • And drink the sunset's tawny dyes.
  • Give me the pools, that lie among
  • The centuried forests! give me those,
  • Deep, dim, and sad as darkness hung
  • Beneath the sunset's somber rose:
  • Still pools, in whose vague mirrors look--
  • Like ragged gypsies round a book
  • Of magic--trees in wild repose.
  • No quiet thing, or innocent,
  • Of water, earth, or air shall please
  • My soul now: but the violent
  • Between the sunset and the trees:
  • The fierce, the splendid, and intense,
  • That love matures in innocence,
  • Like mighty music, give me these!
  • XII
  • When thorn-tree copses still were bare
  • And black along the turbid brook;
  • When catkined willows blurred and shook
  • Great tawny tangles in the air;
  • In bottomlands, the first thaw makes
  • An oozy bog, beneath the trees,
  • Prophetic of the spring that wakes,
  • Sang the sonorous hylodes.
  • Now that wild winds have stripped the thorn,
  • And clogged with leaves the forest-creek;
  • Now that the woods look blown and bleak,
  • And webs are frosty white at morn;
  • At night beneath the spectral sky,
  • A far foreboding cry I hear--
  • The wild fowl calling as they fly?
  • Or wild voice of the dying Year?
  • XIII
  • And still my soul holds phantom tryst,
  • When chestnuts hiss among the coals,
  • Upon the Evening of All Souls,
  • When all the night is moon and mist,
  • And all the world is mystery;
  • I kiss dear lips that death hath kissed,
  • And gaze in eyes no man may see,
  • Filled with a love long lost to me.
  • I hear the night-wind's ghostly glove
  • Flutter the window: then the knob
  • Of some dark door turn, with a sob
  • As when love comes to gaze on love
  • Who lies pale-coffined in a room:
  • And then the iron gallop of
  • The storm, who rides outside; his plume
  • Sweeping the night with dread and gloom.
  • So fancy takes the mind, and paints
  • The darkness with eidolon light,
  • And writes the dead's romance in night
  • On the dim Evening of All Saints:
  • Unheard the hissing nuts; the clink
  • And fall of coals, whose shadow faints
  • Around the hearts that sit and think,
  • Borne far beyond the actual's brink.
  • XIV
  • I heard the wind, before the morn
  • Stretched gaunt, gray fingers 'thwart my pane,
  • Drive clouds down, a dark dragon-train;
  • Its iron visor closed, a horn
  • Of steel from out the north it wound.--
  • No morn like yesterday's! whose mouth,
  • A cool carnation, from the south
  • Breathed through a golden reed the sound
  • Of days that drop clear gold upon
  • Cerulean silver floors of dawn.
  • And all of yesterday is lost
  • And swallowed in to-day's wild light--
  • The birth deformed of day and night,
  • The illegitimate, who cost
  • Its mother secret tears and sighs;
  • Unlovely since unloved; and chilled
  • With sorrows and the shame that filled
  • Its parents' love; which was not wise
  • In passion as the day and night
  • That married yestermorn with light.
  • XV
  • Down through the dark, indignant trees,
  • On indistinguishable wings
  • Of storm, the wind of evening swings;
  • Before its insane anger flees
  • Distracted leaf and shattered bough:
  • There is a rushing as when seas
  • Of thunder beat an iron prow
  • On reefs of wrath and roaring wreck:
  • 'Mid stormy leaves, a hurrying speck
  • Of flickering blackness, driven by,
  • A mad bat whirls along the sky.
  • Like some sad shadow, in the eve's
  • Deep melancholy--visible
  • As by some strange and twilight spell--
  • A gaunt girl stands among the leaves,
  • The night-wind in her dolorous dress:
  • Symbolic of the life that grieves,
  • Of toil that patience makes not less,
  • Her load of fagots fallen there.--
  • A wilder shadow sweeps the air,
  • And she is gone.... Was it the dumb
  • Eidolon of the month to come?
  • XVI
  • The song birds--are they flown away?
  • The song birds of the summer time,
  • That sang their souls into the day,
  • And set the laughing hours to rhyme.
  • No catbird scatters through the bush
  • The sparkling crystals of its song;
  • Within the woods no hermit-thrush
  • Thridding with vocal gold the hush.
  • All day the crows fly cawing past:
  • The acorns drop: the forests scowl:
  • At night I hear the bitter blast
  • Hoot with the hooting of the owl.
  • The wild creeks freeze: the ways are strewn
  • With leaves that clog: beneath the tree
  • The bird, that set its toil to tune,
  • And made a home for melody,
  • Lies dead beneath the snow-white moon.
  • OCTOBER
  • Far off a wind blew, and I heard
  • Wild echoes of the woods reply--
  • The herald of some royal word,
  • With bannered trumpet, blown on high,
  • Meseemed then passed me by:
  • Who summoned marvels there to meet,
  • With pomp, upon a cloth of gold;
  • Where berries of the bittersweet,
  • That, splitting, showed the coals they hold,
  • Sowed garnets through the wold:
  • Where, under tents of maples, seeds
  • Of smooth carnelian, oval red,
  • The spice-bush spangled: where, like beads,
  • The dogwood's rounded rubies--fed
  • With fire--blazed and bled.
  • And there I saw amid the rout
  • Of months, in richness cavalier,
  • A minnesinger--lips apout;
  • A gypsy face; straight as a spear;
  • A rose stuck in his ear:
  • Eyes, sparkling like old German wine,
  • All mirth and moonlight; naught to spare
  • Of slender beard, that lent a line
  • To his short lip; October there,
  • With chestnut curling hair.
  • His brown baretta swept its plume
  • Red through the leaves; his purple hose,
  • Puffed at the thighs, made gleam of gloom;
  • His tawny doublet, slashed with rose,
  • And laced with crimson bows,
  • Outshone the wahoo's scarlet pride,
  • The haw, in rich vermilion dressed:
  • A dagger dangling at his side,
  • A slim lute, banded to his breast,
  • Whereon his hands were pressed.
  • I saw him come.... And, lo, to hear
  • The lilt of his approaching lute,
  • No wonder that the regnant Year
  • Bent down her beauty, blushing mute,
  • Her heart beneath his foot.
  • FRIENDS
  • Down through the woods, along the way
  • That fords the stream; by rock and tree,
  • Where in the bramble-bell the bee
  • Swings; and through twilights green and gray
  • The redbird flashes suddenly,
  • My thoughts went wandering to-day.
  • I found the fields where, row on row,
  • The blackberries hang dark with fruit;
  • Where, nesting at the elder's root,
  • The partridge whistles soft and low;
  • The fields, that billow to the foot
  • Of those old hills we used to know.
  • There lay the pond, all willow-bound,
  • On whose bright face, when noons were hot,
  • We marked the bubbles rise; some plot
  • To lure us in; while all around
  • Our heads,--like faery fancies,--shot
  • The dragonflies without a sound.
  • The pond, above which evening bent
  • To gaze upon her gypsy face;
  • Wherein the twinkling night would trace
  • A vague, inverted firmament;
  • In which the green frogs tuned their bass,
  • And firefly sparkles came and went.
  • The oldtime place we often ranged,
  • When we were playmates, you and I;
  • The oldtime fields, with boyhood's sky
  • Still blue above them!--Naught was changed:
  • Nothing.--Alas! then, tell me why
  • Should we be? whom the years estranged.
  • COMRADERY
  • With eyes hand-arched he looks into
  • The morning's face; then turns away
  • With truant feet, all wet with dew,
  • Out for a holiday.
  • The hill brook sings; incessant stars,
  • Foam-fashioned, on its restless breast;
  • And where he wades its water-bars
  • Its song is happiest.
  • A comrade of the chinquapin,
  • He looks into its knotty eyes
  • And sees its heart; and, deep within,
  • Its soul that makes him wise.
  • The wood-thrush knows and follows him,
  • Who whistles up the birds and bees;
  • And round him all the perfumes swim
  • Of woodland loam and trees.
  • Where'er he pass the silvery springs'
  • Foam-people sing the flowers awake;
  • And sappy lips of bark-clad things
  • Laugh ripe each berried brake.
  • His touch is a companionship;
  • His word an old authority:
  • He comes, a lyric on his lip,
  • The woodboy--Poesy.
  • BARE BOUGHS
  • O heart,--that beat the bird's blithe blood,
  • The blithe bird's strain, and understood
  • The song it sang to leaf and bud,--
  • What dost thou in the wood?
  • O soul,--that kept the brook's glad flow,
  • The glad brook's word to sun and moon,--
  • What dost thou here where song lies low,
  • And dead the dreams of June?
  • Where once was heard a voice of song,
  • The hautboys of the mad winds sing;
  • Where once a music flowed along,
  • The rain's wild bugle's ring.
  • The weedy water frets and ails,
  • And moans in many a sunless fall;
  • And, o'er the melancholy, trails
  • The black crow's eldritch call.
  • Unhappy brook! O withered wood!
  • O days, whom Death makes comrades of!
  • Where are the birds that thrilled the blood
  • When Life struck hands with Love?
  • A song, one soared against the blue;
  • A song, one silvered in the leaves;
  • A song, one blew where orchards grew
  • Gold-appled to the eaves.
  • The birds are flown; the flowers, dead;
  • And sky and earth are bleak and gray:
  • Where Joy once went, all light of tread,
  • Grief haunts the leaf-wild way.
  • DAYS AND DAYS
  • The days that clothed white limbs with heat,
  • And rocked the red rose on their breast,
  • Have passed with amber-sandaled feet
  • Into the ruby-gated west.
  • These were the days that filled the heart
  • With overflowing riches of
  • Life, in whose soul no dream shall start
  • But hath its origin in love.
  • Now come the days gray-huddled in
  • The haze; whose foggy footsteps drip;
  • Who pin beneath a gypsy chin
  • The frosty marigold and hip.
  • The days, whose forms fall shadowy
  • Athwart the heart: whose misty breath
  • Shapes saddest sweets of memory
  • Out of the bitterness of death.
  • AUTUMN SORROW
  • Ah me! too soon the autumn comes
  • Among these purple-plaintive hills!
  • Too soon among the forest gums
  • Premonitory flame she spills,
  • Bleak, melancholy flame that kills.
  • Her white fogs veil the morn, that rims
  • With wet the moonflower's elfin moons;
  • And, like exhausted starlight, dims
  • The last slim lily-disk; and swoons
  • With scents of hazy afternoons.
  • Her gray mists haunt the sunset skies,
  • And build the west's cadaverous fires,
  • Where Sorrow sits with lonely eyes,
  • And hands that wake an ancient lyre,
  • Beside the ghost of dead Desire.
  • THE TREE-TOAD
  • I
  • Secluded, solitary on some underbough,
  • Or cradled in a leaf, 'mid glimmering light,
  • Like Puck thou crouchest: Haply watching how
  • The slow toadstool comes bulging, moony white,
  • Through loosening loam; or how, against the night,
  • The glowworm gathers silver to endow
  • The darkness with; or how the dew conspires
  • To hang, at dusk, with lamps of chilly fires
  • Each blade that shrivels now.
  • II
  • O vague confederate of the whippoorwill,
  • Of owl and cricket and the katydid!
  • Thou gatherest up the silence in one shrill
  • Vibrating note and send'st it where, half hid
  • In cedars, twilight sleeps--each azure lid
  • Drooping a line of golden eyeball still.--
  • Afar, yet near, I hear thy dewy voice
  • Within the Garden of the Hours apoise
  • On dusk's deep daffodil.
  • III
  • Minstrel of moisture! silent when high noon
  • Shows her tanned face among the thirsting clover
  • And parching meadows, thy tenebrious tune
  • Wakes with the dew or when the rain is over.
  • Thou troubadour of wetness and damp lover
  • Of all cool things! admitted comrade boon
  • Of twilight's hush, and little intimate
  • Of eve's first fluttering star and delicate
  • Round rim of rainy moon!
  • IV
  • Art trumpeter of Dwarfland? does thy horn
  • Inform the gnomes and goblins of the hour
  • When they may gambol under haw and thorn,
  • Straddling each winking web and twinkling flower?
  • Or bell-ringer of Elfland? whose tall tower
  • The liriodendron is? from whence is borne
  • The elfin music of thy bell's deep bass,
  • To summon Faeries to their starlit maze,
  • To summon them or warn.
  • THE CHIPMUNK
  • I
  • He makes a roadway of the crumbling fence,
  • Or on the fallen tree,--brown as a leaf
  • Fall stripes with russet,--gambols down the dense
  • Green twilight of the woods. We see not whence
  • He comes, nor whither (in a time so brief)
  • He vanishes--swift carrier of some Fay,
  • Some pixy steed that haunts our child-belief--
  • A goblin glimpse upon some wildwood way.
  • II
  • What harlequin mood of nature qualified
  • Him so with happiness? and limbed him with
  • Such young activity as winds, that ride
  • The ripples, have, dancing on every side?
  • As sunbeams know, that urge the sap and pith
  • Through hearts of trees? yet made him to delight,
  • Gnome-like, in darkness,--like a moonlight myth,--
  • Lairing in labyrinths of the under night.
  • III
  • Here, by a rock, beneath the moss, a hole
  • Leads to his home, the den wherein he sleeps;
  • Lulled by near noises of the laboring mole
  • Tunneling its mine--like some ungainly Troll--
  • Or by the tireless cricket there that keeps
  • Picking its rusty and monotonous lute;
  • Or slower sounds of grass that creeps and creeps,
  • And trees unrolling mighty root on root.
  • IV
  • Such is the music of his sleeping hours.
  • Day hath another--'tis a melody
  • He trips to, made by the assembled flowers,
  • And light and fragrance laughing 'mid the bowers,
  • And ripeness busy with the acorn-tree.
  • Such strains, perhaps, as filled with mute amaze
  • (The silent music of Earth's ecstasy)
  • The Satyr's soul, the Faun of classic days.
  • THE WILD IRIS
  • That day we wandered 'mid the hills,--so lone
  • Clouds are not lonelier, the forest lay
  • In emerald darkness round us. Many a stone
  • And gnarly root, gray-mossed, made wild our way:
  • And many a bird the glimmering light along
  • Showered the golden bubbles of its song.
  • Then in the valley, where the brook went by,
  • Silvering the ledges that it rippled from,--
  • An isolated slip of fallen sky,
  • Epitomizing heaven in its sum,--
  • An iris bloomed--blue, as if, flower-disguised,
  • The gaze of Spring had there materialized.
  • I have forgotten many things since then--
  • Much beauty and much happiness and grief;
  • And toiled and dreamed among my fellow-men,
  • Rejoicing in the knowledge life is brief.
  • "'Tis winter now," so says each barren bough;
  • And face and hair proclaim 'tis winter now.
  • I would forget the gladness of that spring!
  • I would forget that day when she and I,
  • Between the bird-song and the blossoming,
  • Went hand in hand beneath the soft May sky!--
  • Much is forgotten, yea--and yet, and yet,
  • The things we would we never can forget.
  • Nor I how May then minted treasuries
  • Of crowfoot gold; and molded out of light
  • The sorrel's cups, whose elfin chalices
  • Of limpid spar were streaked with rosy white:
  • Nor all the stars of twinkling spiderwort,
  • And mandrake moons with which her brows were girt.
  • But most of all, yea, it were well for me,
  • Me and my heart, that I forget that flower,
  • The blue wild iris, azure fleur-de-lis,
  • That she and I together found that hour.
  • Its recollection can but emphasize
  • The pain of loss, remindful of her eyes.
  • DROUTH
  • I
  • The hot sunflowers by the glaring pike
  • Lift shields of sultry brass; the teasel tops,
  • Pink-thorned, advance with bristling spike on spike
  • Against the furious sunlight. Field and copse
  • Are sick with summer: now, with breathless stops,
  • The locusts cymbal; now grasshoppers beat
  • Their castanets: and rolled in dust, a team,--
  • Like some mean life wrapped in its sorry dream,--
  • An empty wagon rattles through the heat.
  • II
  • Where now the blue wild iris? flowers whose mouths
  • Are moist and musky? Where the sweet-breathed mint,
  • That made the brook-bank herby? Where the South's
  • Wild morning-glories, rich in hues, that hint
  • At coming showers that the rainbows tint?
  • Where all the blossoms that the wildwood knows?
  • The frail oxalis hidden in its leaves;
  • The Indian-pipe, pale as a soul that grieves;
  • The freckled touch-me-not and forest rose.
  • III
  • Dead! dead! all dead beside the drouth-burnt brook,
  • Shrouded in moss or in the shriveled grass.
  • Where waved their bells, from which the wild-bee shook
  • The dewdrop once,--gaunt, in a nightmare mass,
  • The rank weeds crowd; through which the cattle pass,
  • Thirsty and lean, seeking some meager spring,
  • Closed in with thorns, on which stray bits of wool
  • The panting sheep have left, that sought the cool,
  • From morn till evening wearily wandering.
  • IV
  • No bird is heard; no throat to whistle awake
  • The sleepy hush; to let its music leak
  • Fresh, bubble-like, through bloom-roofs of the brake:
  • Only the green-gray heron, famine-weak,--
  • Searching the stale pools of the minnowless creek,--
  • Utters its call; and then the rain-crow, too,
  • False prophet now, croaks to the stagnant air;
  • While overhead,--still as if painted there,--
  • A buzzard hangs, black on the burning blue.
  • RAIN
  • Around, the stillness deepened; then the grain
  • Went wild with wind; and every briery lane
  • Was swept with dust; and then, tempestuous black,
  • Hillward the tempest heaved a monster back,
  • That on the thunder leaned as on a cane;
  • And on huge shoulders bore a cloudy pack,
  • That gullied gold from many a lightning-crack:
  • One big drop splashed and wrinkled down the pane,
  • And then field, hill, and wood were lost in rain.
  • At last, through clouds,--as from a cavern hewn.
  • Into night's heart,--the sun burst angry roon;
  • And every cedar, with its weight of wet,
  • Against the sunset's fiery splendor set,
  • Frightened to beauty, seemed with rubies strewn:
  • Then in drenched gardens, like sweet phantoms met,
  • Dim odors rose of pink and mignonette;
  • And in the east a confidence, that soon
  • Grew to the calm assurance of the moon.
  • AT SUNSET
  • Into the sunset's turquoise marge
  • The moon dips, like a pearly barge
  • Enchantment sails through magic seas
  • To faeryland Hesperides,
  • Over the hills and away.
  • Into the fields, in ghost-gray gown,
  • The young-eyed Dusk comes slowly down;
  • Her apron filled with stars she stands,
  • And one or two slip from her hands
  • Over the hills and away.
  • Above the wood's black caldron bends
  • The witch-faced Night and, muttering, blends
  • The dew and heat, whose bubbles make
  • The mist and musk that haunt the brake
  • Over the hills and away.
  • Oh, come with me, and let us go
  • Beyond the sunset lying low;
  • Beyond the twilight and the night,
  • Into Love's kingdom of long light,
  • Over the hills and away.
  • THE LEAF-CRICKET
  • I
  • Small twilight singer
  • Of dew and mist: thou ghost-gray, gossamer winger
  • Of dusk's dim glimmer,
  • How chill 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
  • With faery notes the silvery stillness sprinkle;
  • Investing wholly
  • The moonlight with divinest melancholy:
  • Until, in seeming,
  • I see the Spirit of Summer sadly dreaming
  • Amid her ripened orchards, russet-strewn,
  • Her great, grave eyes fixed on the harvest-moon.
  • III
  • As dewdrops 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 pixy 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 WIND OF WINTER
  • The Winter Wind, the wind of death,
  • Who knocked upon my door,
  • Now through the keyhole 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 windowpane;
  • With ghostly fingers, snowy white,
  • I heard him tug in vain,
  • Until the shuddering candlelight
  • Did cringe with fear 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-creeping toes,
  • Deep-mantled in the drowsy sound
  • Of night that sleets and snows.
  • And oft, like some thin faery-thing,
  • The stormy hush amid,
  • I hear his captive trebles sing
  • Beneath the kettle's lid;
  • Or now a harp of elfland string
  • In some dark cranny hid.
  • Again I hear him, implike, 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 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 seems
  • Another moon and sky:
  • Then from the hills there comes a cry,
  • The owlet's cry:
  • A shivering voice that sobs and screams,
  • With terror screams:--
  • "Who is it, who is it, who-o-o?
  • Who rides through the dusk and dew,
  • With a pair of horns,
  • As thin as thorns,
  • And face a bubble-blue?--
  • Who, who, who!
  • Who is it, who is it, who-o-o?"
  • II
  • When night has dulled the lily's white,
  • And opened wide the moonflower's 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 wood again it cries,
  • The owlet cries:
  • A shivering voice that calls in fright,
  • In maundering fright:--
  • "Who is it, who is it, who-o-o?
  • 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-o-o?"
  • 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 with fear:--
  • "Who is it, who is it, who-o-o?
  • Who creeps with his glowworm crew
  • Above the mire
  • With a corpse-light fire,
  • As only dead men do?--
  • Who, who, who!
  • Who is it, who is it, who-o-o?"
  • 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 farm-boy 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
  • To where the wood pool bids,
  • Those haunters of the dusk begin,--
  • The katydids.
  • Adown the dark the firefly marks
  • Its flight in gold and emerald sparks;
  • And, loosened from his chain,
  • The shaggy mastiff bounds and barks,
  • And barks again.
  • Each breeze brings scents of hill-heaped hay;
  • And now an owlet, far away,
  • Cries twice or thrice, "T-o-o-w-h-o-o";
  • 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 cowbell 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 beehives 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 Age and young Rusticity
  • Seated at board.
  • THE LOCUST
  • Thou pulse of hotness, who, with reedlike 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;
  • Sleepy the pastures 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 weariness
  • Drops, and the hum of murmuring bees grows less?
  • THE DEAD DAY
  • The west builds high a sepulcher
  • 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 mists like 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.
  • THE OLD WATER MILL
  • Wild ridge on ridge the wooded hills arise,
  • Between whose breezy vistas gulfs of skies
  • Pilot great clouds like towering argosies,
  • And hawk and buzzard breast the azure breeze.
  • With many a foaming fall and glimmering reach
  • Of placid murmur, under elm and beech,
  • The creek goes twinkling through long gleams and glooms
  • Of woodland quiet, summered with perfumes:
  • The creek, in whose clear shallows minnow-schools
  • Glitter or dart; and by whose deeper pools
  • The blue kingfishers and the herons haunt;
  • That, often startled from the freckled flaunt
  • Of blackberry-lilies--where they feed or hide--
  • Trail a lank flight along the forestside
  • With eery clangor. Here a sycamore
  • Smooth, wave-uprooted, builds from shore to shore
  • A headlong bridge; and there, a storm-hurled oak
  • Lays a long dam, where sand and gravel choke
  • The water's lazy way. Here mistflower blurs
  • Its bit of heaven; there the ox-eye stirs
  • Its gloaming hues of pearl and gold; and here,
  • A gray, cool stain, like dawn's own atmosphere,
  • The dim wild carrot lifts its crumpled crest:
  • And over all, at slender flight or rest,
  • The dragonflies, like coruscating rays
  • Of lapis-lazuli and chrysoprase,
  • Drowsily sparkle through the summer days:
  • And, dewlap-deep, here from the noontide heat
  • The bell-hung cattle find a cool retreat;
  • And through the willows girdling the hill,
  • Now far, now near, borne as the soft winds will,
  • Comes the low rushing of the water-mill.
  • Ah, lovely to me from a little child,
  • How changed the place! wherein once, undefiled,
  • The glad communion of the sky and stream
  • Went with me like a presence and a dream.
  • Where once the brambled meads and orchardlands,
  • Poured ripe abundance down with mellow hands
  • Of summer; and the birds of field and wood
  • Called to me in a tongue I understood;
  • And in the tangles of the old rail-fence
  • Even the insect tumult had some sense,
  • And every sound a happy eloquence:
  • And more to me than wisest books can teach
  • The wind and water said; whose words did reach
  • My soul, addressing their magnificent speech,--
  • Raucous and rushing,--from the old mill-wheel,
  • That made the rolling mill-cogs snore and reel,
  • Like some old ogre in a faerytale
  • Nodding above his meat and mug of ale.
  • How memory takes me back the ways that lead--
  • As when a boy--through woodland and through mead!
  • To orchards fruited; or to fields in bloom;
  • Or briery fallows, like a mighty room,
  • Through which the winds swing censers of perfume,
  • And where deep blackberries spread miles of fruit;--
  • A wildwood feast, that stayed the plowboy's foot
  • When to the tasseling acres of the corn
  • He drove his team, fresh in the primrose morn;
  • And from the liberal banquet, nature lent,
  • Plucked dewy handfuls as he whistling went.--
  • A boy once more, I stand with sunburnt feet
  • And watch the harvester sweep down the wheat;
  • Or laze with warm limbs in the unstacked straw
  • Near by the thresher, whose insatiate maw
  • Devours the sheaves, hot-drawling out its hum--
  • Like some great sleepy bee, above a bloom,
  • Made drunk with honey--while, grown big with grain,
  • The bulging sacks receive the golden rain.
  • Again I tread the valley, sweet with hay,
  • And hear the bobwhite calling far away,
  • Or wood-dove cooing in the elder-brake;
  • Or see the sassafras bushes madly shake
  • As swift, a rufous instant, in the glen
  • The red fox leaps and gallops to his den:
  • Or, standing in the violet-colored gloam,
  • Hear roadways sound with holiday riding home
  • From church or fair, or country barbecue,
  • Which half the county to some village drew.
  • How spilled with berries were its summer hills,
  • And strewn with walnuts all its autumn rills!--
  • And chestnuts too! burred from the spring's long flowers;
  • June's, when their tree-tops streamed delirious showers
  • Of blossoming silver, cool, crepuscular,
  • And like a nebulous radiance shone afar.--
  • And maples! how their sappy hearts would pour
  • Rude troughs of syrup, when the winter hoar
  • Steamed with the sugar-kettle, day and night,
  • And, red, the snow was streaked with firelight.
  • Then it was glorious! the mill-dam's edge
  • One slope of frosty crystal, laid a ledge
  • Of pearl across; above which, sleeted trees
  • Tossed arms of ice, that, clashing in the breeze,
  • Tinkled the ringing creek with icicles,
  • Thin as the peal of far-off elfin bells:
  • A sound that in my city dreams I hear,
  • That brings before me, under skies that clear,
  • The old mill in its winter garb of snow,
  • Its frozen wheel like a hoar beard below,
  • And its west windows, two deep eyes aglow.
  • Ah, ancient mill, still do I picture o'er
  • Thy cobwebbed stairs and loft and grain-strewn floor;
  • Thy door,--like some brown, honest hand of toil,
  • And honorable with service of the soil,--
  • Forever open; to which, on his back
  • The prosperous farmer bears his bursting sack,
  • And while the miller measures out his toll,
  • Again I hear, above the cogs' loud roll,--
  • That makes stout joist and rafter groan and sway,--
  • The harmless gossip of the passing day:
  • Good country talk, that says how so-and-so
  • Lived, died, or wedded: how curculio
  • And codling-moth play havoc with the fruit,
  • Smut ruins the corn and blight the grapes to boot:
  • Or what is news from town: next county fair:
  • How well the crops are looking everywhere:--
  • Now this, now that, on which their interests fix,
  • Prospects for rain or frost, and politics.
  • While, all around, the sweet smell of the meal
  • Filters, warm-pouring from the rolling wheel
  • Into the bin; beside which, mealy white,
  • The miller looms, dim in the dusty light.
  • Again I see the miller's home between
  • The crinkling creek and hills of beechen green:
  • Again the miller greets me, gaunt and brown,
  • Who oft o'erawed my boyhood with his frown
  • And gray-browed mien: again he tries to reach
  • My youthful soul with fervid scriptural speech.--
  • For he, of all the countryside confessed,
  • The most religious was and goodliest;
  • A Methodist, who at all meetings led;
  • Prayed with his family ere they went to bed.
  • No books except the Bible had he read--
  • At least so seemed it to my younger head.--
  • All things of Heaven and Earth he'd prove by this,
  • Be it a fact or mere hypothesis:
  • For to his simple wisdom, reverent,
  • _"The Bible says"_ was all of argument.--
  • God keep his soul! his bones were long since laid
  • Among the sunken gravestones in the shade
  • Of those dark-lichened rocks, that wall around
  • The family burying-ground with cedars crowned:
  • Where bristling teasel and the brier combine
  • With clambering wood-rose and the wildgrape-vine
  • To hide the stone whereon his name and dates
  • Neglect, with mossy hand, obliterates.
  • ARGONAUTS
  • With argosies of dawn he sails,
  • And triremes of the dusk,
  • The Seas of Song, whereon the gales
  • Are myths that trail wild musk.
  • He hears the hail of Siren bands
  • From headlands sunset-kissed;
  • The Lotus-eaters wave pale hands
  • Within a land of mist.
  • For many a league he hears the roar
  • Of the Symplegades;
  • And through the far foam of its shore
  • The Isle of Sappho sees.
  • All day he looks, with hazy lids,
  • At gods who cleave the deep;
  • All night he hears the NereĆÆds
  • Sing their wild hearts asleep.
  • When heaven thunders overhead,
  • And hell upheaves the Vast,
  • Dim faces of the ocean's dead
  • Gaze at him from each mast.
  • He but repeats the oracle
  • That bade him first set sail;
  • And cheers his soul with, "All is well!
  • Go on! I will not fail."
  • Behold! he sails no earthly bark
  • And on no earthly sea,
  • Who down the years into the dark,--
  • Divine of destiny,--
  • Holds to his purpose,--ships of Greece,--
  • Ideal-steered afar,
  • For whom awaits the Golden Fleece,
  • The fame that is his star.
  • "THE MORN THAT BREAKS ITS HEART OF GOLD"
  • From an ode "In Commemoration of the Founding of the
  • Massachusetts Bay Colony."
  • The morn that breaks its heart of gold
  • Above the purple hills;
  • The eve, that spills
  • Its nautilus splendor where the sea is rolled;
  • The night, that leads the vast procession in
  • Of stars and dreams,--
  • The beauty that shall never die or pass:--
  • The winds, that spin
  • Of rain the misty mantles of the grass,
  • And thunder raiment of the mountain-streams;
  • The sunbeams, penciling with gold the dusk
  • Green cowls of ancient woods;
  • The shadows, thridding, veiled with musk,
  • The moon-pathed solitudes,
  • Call to my Fancy, saying, "Follow! follow!"
  • Till, following, I see,--
  • Fair as a cascade in a rainbowed hollow,--
  • A dream, a shape, take form,
  • Clad on with every charm,--
  • The vision of that Ideality,
  • Which lured the pioneer in wood and hill,
  • And beckoned him from earth and sky;
  • The dream that cannot die,
  • Their children's children did fulfill,
  • In stone and iron and wood,
  • Out of the solitude,
  • And by a stalwart act
  • Create a mighty fact--
  • A Nation, now that stands
  • Clad on with hope and beauty, strength and song,
  • Eternal, young and strong,
  • Planting her heel on wrong,
  • Her starry banner in triumphant hands....
  • Within her face the rose
  • Of Alleghany dawns;
  • Limbed with Alaskan snows,
  • Floridian starlight in her eyes,--
  • Eyes stern as steel yet tender as a fawn's,--
  • And in her hair
  • The rapture of her rivers; and the dare,
  • As perishless as truth,
  • That o'er the crags of her Sierras flies,
  • Urging the eagle ardor through her veins,
  • Behold her where,
  • Around her radiant youth,
  • The spirits of the cataracts and plains,
  • The genii of the floods and forests, meet,
  • In rainbow mists circling her brow and feet:
  • The forces vast that sit
  • In session round her; powers paraclete,
  • That guard her presence; awful forms and fair,
  • Making secure her place;
  • Guiding her surely as the worlds through space
  • Do laws sidereal; edicts, thunder-lit,
  • Of skyed eternity, in splendor borne
  • On planetary wings of night and morn.
  • * * * * *
  • From her high place she sees
  • Her long procession of accomplished acts,
  • Cloud-winged refulgences
  • Of thoughts in steel and stone, of marble dreams,
  • Lift up tremendous battlements,
  • Sun-blinding, built of facts;
  • While in her soul she seems,
  • Listening, to hear, as from innumerable tents,
  • Ɔonian thunder, wonder, and applause
  • Of all the heroic ages that are gone;
  • Feeling secure
  • That, as her Past, her Future shall endure,
  • As did her Cause
  • When redly broke the dawn
  • Of fierce rebellion, and, beneath its star,
  • The firmaments of war
  • Poured down infernal rain,
  • And North and South lay bleeding mid their slain.
  • And now, no less, shall her great Cause prevail,
  • More so in peace than war,
  • Through the thrilled wire and electric rail,
  • Carrying her message far:
  • Shaping her dream
  • Within the brain of steam,
  • That, with a myriad hands,
  • Labors unceasingly, and knits her lands
  • In firmer union; joining plain and stream
  • With steel; and binding shore to shore
  • With bands of iron;--nerves and arteries,
  • Along whose adamant forever pour
  • Her concrete thoughts, her tireless energies.
  • A VOICE ON THE WIND
  • I
  • 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!"
  • II
  • 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 goes by her wail,--
  • "O my children, come home, come home!
  • O my children, come home!"
  • III
  • She walks with the wind in the windy wood;
  • The dark rain drips from her hair and hood,
  • And her cry sobs by, like a ghost pursued,
  • "O my children, come home!"
  • Where the trees loom gaunt and the rocks stretch drear,
  • The owl and the fox crouch back with fear,
  • As wild through the wood her voice they hear,--
  • "O my children, come home, come home!
  • O my children, come home!"
  • IV
  • 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 wan feet wounded and hands wild-wrung,
  • Sweeps on and on with her cry, far-flung,--
  • "O my children, come home, come home!
  • O my children, come home!"
  • V
  • 'Tis the Spirit of Autumn, no man sees,
  • The mother of Death and of 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!"
  • REQUIEM
  • I
  • No more for him, where hills look down,
  • Shall Morning crown
  • Her rainy brow with blossom bands!--
  • The Morning Hours, whose rosy hands
  • Drop wildflowers of the breaking skies
  • Upon the sod 'neath which he lies.--
  • No more for him! No more! No more!
  • II
  • No more for him, where waters sleep,
  • Shall Evening heap
  • The long gold of the perfect days!
  • The Eventide, whose warm hand lays
  • Great poppies of the afterglow
  • Upon the turf he rests below.--
  • No more for him! No more! no more!
  • Ill
  • No more for him, where woodlands loom,
  • Shall Midnight bloom
  • The star-flowered acres of the blue!
  • The Midnight Hours, whose dim hands strew
  • Dead leaves of darkness, hushed and deep,
  • Upon the grave where he doth sleep.--
  • No more for him! No more! No more!
  • IV
  • The hills, that Morning's footsteps wake:
  • The waves that take
  • A brightness from the Eve; the woods
  • And solitudes, o'er which Night broods,
  • Their Spirits have, whose parts are one
  • With him, whose mortal part is done.
  • Whose part is done.
  • LYNCHERS
  • At the moon's down-going let it be
  • On the quarry hill with its one gnarled tree.
  • The red-rock road of the underbrush,
  • Where the woman came through the summer hush.
  • The sumac high and the elder thick,
  • Where we found the stone and the ragged stick.
  • The trampled road of the thicket, full
  • Of footprints down to the quarry pool.
  • The rocks that ooze with the hue of lead,
  • Where we found her lying stark and dead.
  • The scraggy wood; the negro hut,
  • With its doors and windows locked and shut.
  • A secret signal; a foot's rough tramp;
  • A knock at the door; a lifted lamp.
  • An oath; a scuffle; a ring of masks;
  • A voice that answers a voice that asks.
  • A group of shadows; the moon's red fleck;
  • A running noose and a man's bared neck.
  • A word, a curse, and a shape that swings;
  • The lonely night and a bat's black wings.
  • At the moon's down-going let it be
  • On the quarry hill with its one gnarled tree.
  • THE PARTING
  • She passed the thorn-trees, whose gaunt branches tossed
  • Their spider-shadows round her; and the breeze,
  • Beneath the ashen moon, was full of frost,
  • And mouthed and mumbled to the sickly trees,
  • Like some starved hag who sees her children freeze.
  • Dry-eyed she waited by the sycamore.
  • Some stars made misty blotches in the sky.
  • And all the wretched willows on the shore
  • Looked faded as a jaundiced cheek or eye.
  • She felt their pity and could only sigh.
  • And then his skiff ground on the river rocks.
  • Whistling he came into the shadow made
  • By that dead tree. He kissed her dark brown locks;
  • And round her form his eager arms were laid.
  • Passive she stood, her secret unbetrayed.
  • And then she spoke, while still his greeting kiss
  • Ached in her hair. She did not dare to lift
  • Her eyes to his--her anguished eyes to his,
  • While tears smote crystal in her throat. One rift
  • Of weakness humored might set all adrift.
  • Fields over which a path, overwhelmed with burrs
  • And ragweeds, noisy with the grasshoppers,
  • Leads,--lost, irresolute as paths the cows
  • Wear through the woods,--unto a woodshed; then,
  • With wrecks of windows, to a huddled house,
  • Where men have murdered men.
  • A house, whose tottering chimney, clay and rock,
  • Is seamed and crannied; whose lame door and lock
  • Are bullet-bored; around which, there and here,
  • Are sinister stains.--One dreads to look around.--
  • The place seems thinking of that time of fear
  • And dares not breathe a sound.
  • Within is emptiness: The sunlight falls
  • On faded journals papering the walls;
  • On advertisement chromos, torn with time,
  • Around a hearth where wasps and spiders build.--
  • The house is dead: meseems that night of crime
  • It, too, was shot and killed.
  • KU KLUX
  • We have sent him seeds of the melon's core,
  • And nailed a warning upon his door:
  • By the Ku Klux laws we can do no more.
  • Down in the hollow, 'mid crib and stack,
  • The roof of his low-porched house looms black;
  • Not a line of light at the door-sill's crack.
  • Yet arm and mount! and mask and ride!
  • The hounds can sense though the fox may hide!
  • And for a word too much men oft have died.
  • The clouds blow heavy toward the moon.
  • The edge of the storm will reach it soon.
  • The kildee cries and the lonesome loon.
  • The clouds shall flush with a wilder glare
  • Than the lightning makes with its angled flare,
  • When the Ku Klux verdict is given there.
  • In the pause of the thunder rolling low,
  • A rifle's answer--who shall know
  • From the wind's fierce hurl and the rain's black blow?
  • Only the signature, written grim
  • At the end of the message brought to him--
  • A hempen rope and a twisted limb.
  • So arm and mount! and mask and ride!
  • The hounds can sense though the fox may hide!--
  • For a word too much men oft have died.
  • EIDOLONS
  • The white moth-mullein brushed its slim
  • Cool, faery flowers against his knee;
  • In places where the way lay dim
  • The branches, arching suddenly,
  • Made tomblike mystery for him.
  • The wild-rose and the elder, drenched
  • With rain, made pale a misty place,--
  • From which, as from a ghost, he blenched;
  • He walking with averted face,
  • And lips in desolation clenched.
  • For far within the forest,--where
  • Weird shadows stood like phantom men,
  • And where the ground-hog dug its lair,
  • The she-fox whelped and had her den,--
  • The thing kept calling, buried there.
  • One dead trunk, like a ruined tower,
  • Dark-green with toppling trailers, shoved
  • Its wild wreck o'er the bush; one bower
  • Looked like a dead man, capped and gloved,
  • The one who haunted him each hour.
  • Now at his side he heard it: thin
  • As echoes of a thought that speaks
  • To conscience. Listening with his chin
  • Upon his palm, against his cheeks
  • He felt the moon's white finger win.
  • And now the voice was still: and lo,
  • With eyes that stared on naught but night,
  • He saw?--what none on earth shall know!--
  • Was it the face that far from sight
  • Had lain here, buried long ago?
  • But men who found him,--thither led
  • By the wild fox,--within that place
  • Read in his stony eyes, 'tis said,
  • The thing he saw there, face to face,
  • The thing that left him staring dead.
  • THE MAN HUNT
  • The woods stretch deep to the mountain side,
  • And the brush is wild where a man may hide.
  • They have brought the bloodhounds up again
  • To the roadside rock where they found the slain.
  • They have brought the bloodhounds up, and they
  • Have taken the trail to the mountain way.
  • Three times they circled the trail and crossed;
  • And thrice they found it and thrice they lost.
  • Now straight through the trees and the underbrush
  • They follow the scent through the forest's hush.
  • And their deep-mouthed bay is a pulse of fear
  • In the heart of the wood that the man must hear.
  • The man who crouches among the trees
  • From the stern-faced men who follow these.
  • A huddle of rocks that the ooze has mossed,
  • And the trail of the hunted again is lost.
  • An upturned pebble; a bit of ground
  • A heel has trampled--the trail is found.
  • And the woods re-echo the bloodhounds' bay
  • As again they take to the mountain way.
  • A rock; a ribbon of road; a ledge,
  • With a pine tree clutching its crumbling edge.
  • A pine, that the lightning long since clave,
  • Whose huge roots hollow a ragged cave.
  • A shout; a curse; and a face aghast;
  • The human quarry is laired at last.
  • The human quarry with clay-clogged hair
  • And eyes of terror who waits them there.
  • That glares and crouches and rising then
  • Hurls clods and curses at dogs and men.
  • Until the blow of a gun-butt lays
  • Him stunned and bleeding upon his face.
  • A rope; a prayer; and an oak-tree near,
  • And a score of hands to swing him clear.
  • A grim, black thing for the setting sun
  • And the moon and the stars to gaze upon.
  • MY ROMANCE
  • If it so befalls that the midnight hovers
  • In mist no moonlight breaks,
  • The leagues of the years my spirit covers,
  • And my self myself forsakes.
  • And I live in a land of stars and flowers,
  • White cliffs by a silvery sea;
  • And the pearly points of her opal towers
  • From the mountains beckon me.
  • And I think that I know that I hear her calling
  • From a casement bathed with light--
  • Through music of waters in waters falling
  • Mid palms from a mountain height.
  • And I feel that I think my love's awaited
  • By the romance of her charms;
  • That her feet are early and mine belated
  • In a world that chains my arms.
  • But I break my chains and the rest is easy--
  • In the shadow of the rose,
  • Snow-white, that blooms in her garden breezy,
  • We meet and no one knows.
  • And we dream sweet dreams and kiss sweet kisses;
  • The world--it may live or die!
  • The world that forgets; that never misses
  • The life that has long gone by.
  • We speak old vows that have long been spoken;
  • And weep a long-gone woe:
  • For you must know our hearts were broken
  • Hundreds of years ago.
  • 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.
  • BALLAD OF LOW-LIE-DOWN
  • John-A-Dreams and Harum-Scarum
  • Came a-riding into town:
  • At the Sign o' the Jug-and-Jorum
  • There they met with Low-lie-down.
  • Brave in shoes of Romany leather,
  • Bodice blue and gypsy gown,
  • And a cap of fur and feather,
  • In the inn sat Low-lie-down.
  • Harum-Scarum kissed her lightly;
  • Smiled into her eyes of brown:
  • Clasped her waist and held her tightly,
  • Laughing, "Love me, Low-lie-down!"
  • Then with many an oath and swagger,
  • As a man of great renown,
  • On the board he clapped his dagger,
  • Called for sack and sat him down.
  • So a while they laughed together;
  • Then he rose and with a frown
  • Sighed, "While still 'tis pleasant weather,
  • I must leave thee, Low-lie-down."
  • So away rode Harum-Scarum;
  • With a song rode out of town;
  • At the Sign o' the Jug-and-Jorum
  • Weeping tarried Low-lie-down.
  • Then this John-a-dreams, in tatters,
  • In his pocket ne'er a crown,
  • Touched her, saying, "Wench, what matters!
  • Dry your eyes and, come, sit down.
  • "Here's my hand: we'll roam together,
  • Far away from thorp and town.
  • Here's my heart,--for any weather,--
  • And my dreams, too, Low-lie-down.
  • "Some men call me dreamer, poet:
  • Some men call me fool and clown--
  • What I am but you shall know it,
  • Only you, sweet Low-lie-down."
  • For a little while she pondered:
  • Smiled: then said, "Let care go drown!"
  • Up and kissed him.... Forth they wandered,
  • John-a-dreams and Low-lie-down.
  • ROMANCE
  • Thus have I pictured her:--In Arden old
  • A white-browed maiden with a falcon eye,
  • Rose-flushed of face, with locks of wind-blown gold,
  • Teaching her hawks to fly.
  • Or, 'mid her boar-hounds, panting with the heat,
  • In huntsman green, sounding the hunt's wild prize,
  • Plumed, dagger-belted, while beneath her feet
  • The spear-pierced monster dies.
  • Or in BrĆ©cĆ©liand, on some high tower,
  • Clad white in samite, last of her lost race,
  • My soul beholds her, lovelier than a flower,
  • Gazing with pensive face.
  • Or, robed in raiment of romantic lore,
  • Like Oriana, dark of eye and hair,
  • Riding through realms of legend evermore,
  • And ever young and fair.
  • Or now like Bradamant, as brave as just,
  • In complete steel, her pure face lit with scorn,
  • At giant castles, dens of demon lust,
  • Winding her bugle-horn.
  • Another Una; and in chastity
  • A second Britomart; in beauty far
  • O'er her who led King Charles's chivalry
  • And Paynim lands to war....
  • Now she, from Avalon's deep-dingled bowers,--
  • 'Mid which white stars and never-waning moons
  • Make marriage; and dim lips of musk-mouthed flowers
  • Sigh faint and fragrant tunes,--
  • Implores me follow; and, in shadowy shapes
  • Of sunset, shows me,--mile on misty mile
  • Of purple precipice,--all the haunted capes
  • Of her enchanted isle.
  • Where, bowered in bosks and overgrown with vine,
  • Upon a headland breasting violet seas,
  • Her castle towers, like a dream divine,
  • With stairs and galleries.
  • And at her casement, Circe-beautiful,
  • Above the surgeless reaches of the deep,
  • She sits, while, in her gardens, fountains lull
  • The perfumed wind asleep.
  • Or, round her brow a diadem of spars,
  • She leans and hearkens, from her raven height,
  • The nightingales that, choiring to the stars,
  • Take with wild song the night.
  • Or, where the moon is mirrored in the waves,
  • To mark, deep down, the Sea King's city rolled,
  • Wrought of huge shells and labyrinthine caves,
  • Ribbed pale with pearl and gold.
  • There doth she wait forever; and the kings
  • Of all the world have wooed her: but she cares
  • For none but him, the Love, that dreams and sings,
  • That sings and dreams and dares.
  • AMADIS AND ORIANA
  • From "Beltenebros at Miraflores"
  • O sunset, from the springs of stars
  • Draw down thy cataracts of gold;
  • And belt their streams with burning bars
  • Of ruby on which flame is rolled:
  • Drench dingles with laburnum light;
  • Drown every vale in violet blaze:
  • Rain rose-light down; and, poppy-bright,
  • Die downward o'er the hills of haze,
  • And bring at last the stars of night!
  • The stars and moon! that silver world,
  • Which, like a spirit, faces west,
  • Her foam-white feet with light empearled,
  • Bearing white flame within her breast:
  • Earth's sister sphere of fire and snow,
  • Who shows to Earth her heart's pale heat,
  • And bids her mark its pulses glow,
  • And hear their crystal currents beat
  • With beauty, lighting all below.
  • O cricket, with thy elfin pipe,
  • That tinkles in the grass and grain;
  • And dove-pale buds, that, dropping, stripe
  • The glen's blue night, and smell of rain;
  • O nightingale, that so dost wail
  • On yonder blossoming branch of snow,
  • Thrill, fill the wild deer-haunted dale,
  • Where Oriana, walking slow,
  • Comes, thro' the moonlight, dreamy pale.
  • She comes to meet me!--Earth and air
  • Grow radiant with another light.
  • In her dark eyes and her dark hair
  • Are all the stars and all the night:
  • She comes! I clasp her!--and it is
  • As if no grief had ever been.--
  • In all the world for us who kiss
  • There are no other women or men
  • But Oriana and Amadis.
  • THE ROSICRUCIAN
  • I
  • The tripod flared with a purple spark,
  • And the mist hung emerald in the dark:
  • Now he stooped to the lilac flame
  • Over the glare of the amber embers,
  • Thrice to utter no earthly name;
  • Thrice, like a mind that half remembers;
  • Bathing his face in the magic mist
  • Where the brilliance burned like an amethyst.
  • II
  • "Sylph, whose soul was born of mine,
  • Born of the love that made me thine,
  • Once more flash on my eyes! Again
  • Be the loved caresses taken!
  • Lip to lip let our forms remain!--
  • Here in the circle sense, awaken!
  • Ere spirit meet spirit, the flesh laid by,
  • Let me touch thee, and let me die."
  • III
  • Sunset heavens may burn, but never
  • Know such splendor! There bloomed an ever
  • Opaline orb, where the sylphid rose
  • A shape of luminous white; diviner
  • White than the essence of light that sows
  • The moons and suns through space; and finer
  • Than radiance born of a shooting-star,
  • Or the wild Aurora that streams afar.
  • IV
  • "Look on the face of the soul to whom
  • Thou givest thy soul like added perfume!
  • Thou, who heard'st me, who long had prayed,
  • Waiting alone at morning's portal!--
  • Thus on thy lips let my lips be laid,
  • Love, who hast made me all immortal!
  • Give me thine arms now! Come and rest
  • Weariness out on my beaming breast!"
  • V
  • Was it her soul? or the sapphire fire
  • That sang like the note of a seraph's lyre?
  • Out of her mouth there fell no word--
  • She spake with her soul, as a flower speaketh.
  • Fragrant messages none hath heard,
  • Which the sense divines when the spirit seeketh....
  • And he seemed alone in a place so dim
  • That the spirit's face, who was gazing at him,
  • For its burning eyes he could not see:
  • Then he knew he had died; that she and he
  • Were one; and he saw that this was she.
  • THE AGE OF GOLD
  • The clouds that tower in storm, that beat
  • Arterial thunder in their veins;
  • The wildflowers lifting, shyly sweet,
  • Their perfect faces from the plains,--
  • All high, all lowly things of Earth
  • For no vague end have had their birth.
  • Low strips of mist that mesh the moon
  • Above the foaming waterfall;
  • And mountains, that God's hand hath hewn,
  • And forests, where the great winds call,--
  • Within the grasp of such as see
  • Are parts of a conspiracy;
  • To seize the soul with beauty; hold
  • The heart with love: and thus fulfill
  • Within ourselves the Age of Gold,
  • That never died, and never will,--
  • As long as one true nature feels
  • The wonders that the world reveals.
  • BEAUTY AND ART
  • The gods are dead; but still for me
  • Lives on in wildwood brook and tree
  • Each myth, each old divinity.
  • For me still laughs among the rocks
  • The Naiad; and the Dryad's locks
  • Drop perfume on the wildflower flocks.
  • The Satyr's hoof still prints the loam;
  • And, whiter than the wind-blown foam,
  • The Oread haunts her mountain home.
  • To him, whose mind is fain to dwell
  • With loveliness no time can quell,
  • All things are real, imperishable.
  • To him--whatever facts may say--
  • Who sees the soul beneath the clay,
  • Is proof of a diviner day.
  • The very stars and flowers preach
  • A gospel old as God, and teach
  • Philosophy a child may reach;
  • That cannot die; that shall not cease;
  • That lives through idealities
  • Of Beauty, ev'n as Rome and Greece.
  • That lifts the soul above the clod,
  • And, working out some period
  • Of art, is part and proof of God.
  • THE SEA SPIRIT
  • Ah me! I shall not waken soon
  • From dreams of such divinity!
  • A spirit singing 'neath the moon
  • To me.
  • Wild sea-spray driven of the storm
  • Is not so wildly white as she,
  • Who beckoned with a foam-white arm
  • To me.
  • With eyes dark green, and golden-green
  • Long locks that rippled drippingly,
  • Out of the green wave she did lean
  • To me.
  • And sang; till Earth and Heaven seemed
  • A far, forgotten memory,
  • And more than Heaven in her who gleamed
  • On me.
  • Sleep, sweeter than love's face or home;
  • And death's immutability;
  • And music of the plangent foam,
  • For me!
  • Sweep over her! with all thy ships,
  • With all thy stormy tides, O sea!--
  • The memory of immortal lips
  • For me!
  • GARGAPHIE
  • "_Succinctae sacra Dianae_".--OVID
  • There the ragged sunlight lay
  • Tawny on thick ferns and gray
  • On dark waters: dimmer,
  • Lone and deep, the cypress grove
  • Bowered mystery and wove
  • Braided lights, like those that love
  • On the pearl plumes of a dove
  • Faint to gleam and glimmer.
  • II
  • There centennial pine and oak
  • Into stormy cadence broke:
  • Hollow rocks gloomed, slanting,
  • Echoing in dim arcade,
  • Looming with long moss, that made
  • Twilight streaks in tatters laid:
  • Where the wild hart, hunt-affrayed,
  • Plunged the water, panting.
  • III
  • Poppies of a sleepy gold
  • Mooned the gray-green darkness rolled
  • Down its vistas, making
  • Wisp-like blurs of flame. And pale
  • Stole the dim deer down the vale:
  • And the haunting nightingale
  • Throbbed unseen--the olden tale
  • All its wild heart breaking.
  • IV
  • There the hazy serpolet,
  • Dewy cistus, blooming wet,
  • Blushed on bank and bowlder;
  • There the cyclamen, as wan
  • As first footsteps of the dawn,
  • Carpeted the spotted lawn:
  • Where the nude nymph, dripping drawn,
  • Basked a wildflower shoulder.
  • V
  • In the citrine shadows there
  • What tall presences and fair,
  • Godlike, stood!--or, gracious
  • As the rock-rose there that grew,
  • Delicate and dim as dew,
  • Stepped from boles of oaks, and drew
  • Faunlike forms to follow, who
  • Filled the forest spacious!--
  • VI
  • Guarding that Boeotian
  • Valley so no foot of man
  • Soiled its silence holy
  • With profaning tread--save one,
  • The Hyantian: ActƦon,
  • Who beheld, and might not shun
  • Pale Diana's wrath; undone
  • By his own mad folly.
  • VII
  • Lost it lies--that valley: sleeps
  • In serene enchantment; keeps
  • Beautiful its banished
  • Bowers that no man may see;
  • Fountains that her deity
  • Haunts, and every rock and tree
  • Where her hunt goes swinging free
  • As in ages vanished.
  • THE DEAD OREAD
  • Her heart is still and leaps no more
  • With holy passion when the breeze,
  • Her whilom playmate, as before,
  • Comes with the language of the bees,
  • Sad songs her mountain cedars sing,
  • And water-music murmuring.
  • Her calm white feet,--erst fleet and fast
  • As Daphne's when a god pursued,--
  • No more will dance like sunlight past
  • The gold-green vistas of the wood,
  • Where every quailing floweret
  • Smiled into life where they were set.
  • Hers were the limbs of living light,
  • And breasts of snow; as virginal
  • As mountain drifts; and throat as white
  • As foam of mountain waterfall;
  • And hyacinthine curls, that streamed
  • Like crag-born mists, and gloomed and gleamed.
  • Her presence breathed such scents as haunt
  • Moist, mountain dells and solitudes;
  • Aromas wild as some wild plant
  • That fills with sweetness all the woods:
  • And comradeships of stars and skies
  • Shone in the azure of her eyes.
  • Her grave be by a mossy rock
  • Upon the top of some wild hill,
  • Removed, remote from men who mock
  • The myths and dreams of life they kill:
  • Where all of beauty, naught of lust
  • May guard her solitary dust.
  • THE FAUN
  • The joys that touched thee once, be mine!
  • The sympathies of sky and sea,
  • The friendships of each rock and pine,
  • That made thy lonely life, ah me!
  • In Tempe or in Gargaphie.
  • Such joy as thou didst feel when first,
  • On some wild crag, thou stood'st alone
  • To watch the mountain tempest burst,
  • With streaming thunder, lightning-sown,
  • On Latmos or on Pelion.
  • Thy awe! when, crowned with vastness, Night
  • And Silence ruled the deep's abyss;
  • And through dark leaves thou saw'st the white
  • Breasts of the starry maids who kiss
  • Pale feet of moony Artemis.
  • Thy dreams! when, breasting matted weeds
  • Of Arethusa, thou didst hear
  • The music of the wind-swept reeds;
  • And down dim forest-ways drew near
  • Shy herds of slim Arcadian deer.
  • Thy wisdom! that knew naught but love
  • And beauty, with which love is fraught;
  • The wisdom of the heart--whereof
  • All noblest passions spring--that thought
  • As Nature thinks, "All else is naught."
  • Thy hope! wherein To-morrow set
  • No shadow; hope, that, lacking care
  • And retrospect, held no regret,
  • But bloomed in rainbows everywhere,
  • Filling with gladness all the air.
  • These were thine all: in all life's moods
  • Embracing all of happiness:
  • And when within thy long-loved woods
  • Didst lay thee down to die--no less
  • Thy happiness stood by to bless.
  • THE PAPHIAN VENUS
  • With anxious eyes and dry, expectant lips,
  • Within the sculptured stoa by the sea,
  • All day she waited while, like ghostly ships,
  • Long clouds rolled over Paphos: the wild bee
  • Hung in the sultry poppy, half asleep,
  • Beside the shepherd and his drowsy sheep.
  • White-robed she waited day by day; alone
  • With the white temple's shrined concupiscence,
  • The Paphian goddess on her obscene throne,
  • Binding all chastity to violence,
  • All innocence to lust that feels no shame--
  • Venus Mylitta born of filth and flame.
  • So must they haunt her marble portico,
  • The devotees of Paphos, passion-pale
  • As moonlight streaming through the stormy snow;
  • Dark eyes desirous of the stranger sail,
  • The gods shall bring across the Cyprian Sea,
  • With him elected to their mastery.
  • A priestess of the temple came, when eve
  • Blazed, like a satrap's triumph, in the west;
  • And watched her listening to the ocean's heave,
  • Dusk's golden glory on her face and breast,
  • And in her hair the rosy wind's caress,--
  • Pitying her dedicated tenderness.
  • When out of darkness night persuades the stars,
  • A dream shall bend above her saying, "Soon
  • A barque shall come with purple sails and spars,
  • Sailing from Tarsus 'neath a low white moon;
  • And thou shalt see one in a robe of Tyre
  • Facing toward thee like the god Desire.
  • "Rise then! as, clad in starlight, riseth Night--
  • Thy nakedness clad on with loveliness!
  • So shalt thou see him, like the god Delight,
  • Breast through the foam and climb the cliff to press
  • Hot lips to thine and lead thee in before
  • Love's awful presence where ye shall adore."
  • Thus at her heart the vision entered in,
  • With lips of lust the lips of song had kissed,
  • And eyes of passion laughing with sweet sin,
  • A shimmering splendor robed in amethyst,--
  • Seen like that star set in the glittering gloam,--
  • Venus Mylitta born of fire and foam.
  • So shall she dream until, near middle night,--
  • When on the blackness of the ocean's rim
  • The moon, like some war-galleon all alight
  • With blazing battle, from the sea shall swim,--
  • A shadow, with inviolate lips and eyes,
  • Shall rise before her speaking in this wise:
  • "So hast thou heard the promises of one,--
  • Of her, with whom the God of gods is wroth,--
  • For whom was prophesied at Babylon
  • The second death--Chaldaean Mylidoth!
  • Whose feet take hold on darkness and despair,
  • Hissing destruction in her heart and hair.
  • "Wouldst thou behold the vessel she would bring?--
  • A wreck! ten hundred years have smeared with slime:
  • A hulk! where all abominations cling,
  • The spawn and vermin of the seas of time:
  • Wild waves have rotted it; fierce suns have scorched;
  • Mad winds have tossed and stormy stars have torched.
  • "Can lust give birth to love? The vile and foul
  • Be mother to beauty? Lo! can this thing be?--
  • A monster like a man shall rise and howl
  • Upon the wreck across the crawling sea,
  • Then plunge; and swim unto thee; like an ape,
  • A beast all belly.--Thou canst not escape!"
  • Gone was the shadow with the suffering brow;
  • And in the temple's porch she lay and wept,
  • Alone with night, the ocean, and her vow.--
  • Then up the east the moon's full splendor swept,
  • And dark between it--wreck or argosy?--
  • A sudden vessel far away at sea.
  • ORIENTAL ROMANCE
  • I
  • Beyond lost seas of summer she
  • Dwelt on an island of the sea,
  • Last scion of that dynasty,
  • Queen of a race forgotten long.--
  • With eyes of light and lips of song,
  • From seaward groves of blowing lemon,
  • She called me in her native tongue,
  • Low-leaned on some rich robe of Yemen.
  • II
  • I was a king. Three moons we drove
  • Across green gulfs, the crimson clove
  • And cassia spiced, to claim her love.
  • Packed was my barque with gums and gold;
  • Rich fabrics; sandalwood, grown old
  • With odor; gems; and pearls of Oman,--
  • Than her white breasts less white and cold;--
  • And myrrh, less fragrant than this woman.
  • III
  • From Bassora I came. We saw
  • Her eagle castle on a claw
  • Of soaring precipice, o'erawe
  • The surge and thunder of the spray.
  • Like some great opal, far away
  • It shone, with battlement and spire,
  • Wherefrom, with wild aroma, day
  • Blew splintered lights of sapphirine fire.
  • IV
  • Lamenting caverns dark, that keep
  • Sonorous echoes of the deep,
  • Led upward to her castle steep....
  • Fair as the moon, whose light is shed
  • In Ramadan, was she, who led
  • My love unto her island bowers,
  • To find her.... lying young and dead
  • Among her maidens and her flowers.
  • THE MAMELUKE
  • I
  • She was a queen. 'Midst mutes and slaves,
  • A mameluke, he loved her.----Waves
  • Dashed not more hopelessly the paves
  • Of her high marble palace-stair
  • Than lashed his love his heart's despair.--
  • As souls in Hell dream Paradise,
  • He suffered yet forgot it there
  • Beneath Rommaneh's houri eyes.
  • II
  • With passion eating at his heart
  • He served her beauty, but dared dart
  • No amorous glance, nor word impart.--
  • TaĆÆfi leather's perfumed tan
  • Beneath her, on a low divan
  • She lay 'mid cushions stuffed with down:
  • A slave-girl with an ostrich fan
  • Sat by her in a golden gown.
  • III
  • She bade him sing. Fair lutanist,
  • She loved his voice. With one white wrist,
  • Hooped with a blaze of amethyst,
  • She raised her ruby-crusted lute:
  • Gold-welted stuff, like some rich fruit,
  • Her raiment, diamond-showered, rolled
  • Folds pigeon-purple, whence one foot
  • Drooped in an anklet-twist of gold.
  • IV
  • He stood and sang with all the fire
  • That boiled within his blood's desire,
  • That made him all her slave yet higher:
  • And at the end his passion durst
  • Quench with one burning kiss its thirst.--
  • O eunuchs, did her face show scorn
  • When through his heart your daggers burst?
  • And dare ye say he died forlorn?
  • THE SLAVE
  • He waited till within her tower
  • Her taper signalled him the hour.
  • He was a prince both fair and brave.--
  • What hope that he would love _her_ slave!
  • He of the Persian dynasty;
  • And she a Queen of Araby!--
  • No Peri singing to a star
  • Upon the sea were lovelier....
  • I helped her drop the silken rope.
  • He clomb, aflame with love and hope.
  • I drew the dagger from my gown
  • And cut the ladder, leaning down.
  • Oh, wild his face, and wild the fall:
  • Her cry was wilder than them all.
  • I heard her cry; I heard him moan;
  • And stood as merciless as stone.
  • The eunuchs came: fierce scimitars
  • Stirred in the torch-lit corridors.
  • She spoke like one who speaks in sleep,
  • And bade me strike or she would leap.
  • I bade her leap: the time was short:
  • And kept the dagger for my heart.
  • She leapt.... I put their blades aside,
  • And smiling in their faces--died.
  • THE PORTRAIT
  • In some quaint Nurnberg _maler-atelier_
  • Uprummaged. When and where was never clear
  • Nor yet how he obtained it. When, by whom
  • 'Twas painted--who shall say? itself a gloom
  • Resisting inquisition. I opine
  • It is a Dürer. Mark that touch, this line;
  • Are they deniable?--Distinguished grace
  • Of the pure oval of the noble face
  • Tarnished in color badly. Half in light
  • Extend it so. Incline. The exquisite
  • Expression leaps abruptly: piercing scorn;
  • Imperial beauty; each, an icy thorn
  • Of light, disdainful eyes and ... well! no use!
  • Effaced and but beheld! a sad abuse
  • Of patience.--Often, vaguely visible,
  • The portrait fills each feature, making swell
  • The heart with hope: avoiding face and hair
  • Start out in living hues; astonished, "There!--
  • The picture lives!" your soul exults, when, lo!
  • You hold a blur; an undetermined glow
  • Dislimns a daub.--"Restore?"--Ah, I have tried
  • Our best restorers, and it has defied.
  • Storied, mysterious, say, perhaps a ghost
  • Lives in the canvas; hers, some artist lost;
  • A duchess', haply. Her he worshiped; dared
  • Not tell he worshiped. From his window stared
  • Of Nuremberg one sunny morn when she
  • Passed paged to court. Her cold nobility
  • Loved, lived for like a purpose. Seized and plied
  • A feverish brush--her face!--Despaired and died.
  • The narrow Judengasse: gables frown
  • Around a humpbacked usurer's, where brown,
  • Neglected in a corner, long it lay,
  • Heaped in a pile of riff-raff, such as--say,
  • Retables done in tempera and old
  • Panels by Wohlgemuth; stiff paintings cold
  • Of martyrs and apostles,--names forgot,--
  • Holbeins and Dürers, say; a haloed lot
  • Of praying saints, madonnas: these, perchance,
  • 'Mid wine-stained purples, mothed; an old romance;
  • A crucifix and rosary; inlaid
  • Arms, Saracen-elaborate; a strayed
  • Niello of Byzantium; rich work,
  • In bronze, of Florence: here a murderous dirk,
  • There holy patens.
  • So.--My ancestor,
  • The first De Herancour, esteemed by far
  • This piece most precious, most desirable;
  • Purchased and brought to Paris. It looked well
  • In the dark paneling above the old
  • Hearth of the room. The head's religious gold,
  • The soft severity of the nun face,
  • Made of the room an apostolic place
  • Revered and feared.--
  • Like some lived scene I see
  • That Gothic room: its Flemish tapestry;
  • Embossed within the marble hearth a shield,
  • Carved 'round with thistles; in its argent field
  • Three sable mallets--arms of Herancour--
  • Topped with the crest, a helm and hands that bore,
  • Outstretched, two mallets. On a lectern laid,--
  • Between two casements, lozenge-paned, embayed,--
  • A vellum volume of black-lettered text.
  • Near by a taper, winking as if vexed
  • With silken gusts a nervous curtain sends,
  • Behind which, haply, daggered Murder bends.
  • And then I seem to see again the hall;
  • The stairway leading to that room.--Then all
  • The terror of that night of blood and crime
  • Passes before me.--
  • It is Catherine's time:
  • The house De Herancour's. On floors, splashed red,
  • Torchlight of Medicean wrath is shed.
  • Down carven corridors and rooms,--where couch
  • And chairs lie shattered and black shadows crouch
  • Torch-pierced with fear,--a sound of swords draws near--
  • The stir of searching steel.
  • What find they here,
  • Torch-bearer, swordsman, and fierce halberdier,
  • On St. Bartholomew's?--A Huguenot!
  • Dead in his chair! Eyes, violently shot
  • With horror, glaring at the portrait there:
  • Coiling his neck a blood line, like a hair
  • Of finest fire. The portrait, like a fiend,--
  • Looking exalted visitation,--leaned
  • From its black panel; in its eyes a hate
  • Satanic; hair--a glowing auburn; late
  • A dull, enduring golden.
  • "Just one thread
  • Of the fierce hair around his throat," they said,
  • "Twisting a burning ray; he--staring dead."
  • THE BLACK KNIGHT
  • I had not found the road too short,
  • As once I had in days of youth,
  • In that old forest of long ruth,
  • Where my young knighthood broke its heart,
  • Ere love and it had come to part,
  • And lies made mockery of truth.
  • I had not found the road too short.
  • A blind man, by the nightmare way,
  • Had set me right when I was wrong.--
  • I had been blind my whole life long--
  • What wonder then that on this day
  • The blind should show me how astray
  • My strength had gone, my heart once strong.
  • A blind man pointed me the way.
  • The road had been a heartbreak one,
  • Of roots and rocks and tortured trees,
  • And pools, above my horse's knees,
  • And wandering paths, where spiders spun
  • 'Twixt boughs that never saw the sun,
  • And silence of lost centuries.
  • The road had been a heartbreak one.
  • It seemed long years since that black hour
  • When she had fled, and I took horse
  • To follow, and without remorse
  • To slay her and her paramour
  • In that old keep, that ruined tower,
  • From whence was borne her father's corse.
  • It seemed long years since that black hour.
  • And now my horse was starved and spent,
  • My gallant destrier, old and spare;
  • The vile road's mire in mane and hair,
  • I felt him totter as he went:--
  • Such hungry woods were never meant
  • For pasture: hate had reaped them bare.
  • Aye, my poor beast was old and spent.
  • I too had naught to stay me with;
  • And like my horse was starved and lean;
  • My armor gone; my raiment mean;
  • Bare-haired I rode; uneasy sith
  • The way I'd lost, and some dark myth
  • Far in the woods had laughed obscene.
  • I had had naught to stay me with.
  • Then I dismounted. Better so.
  • And found that blind man at my rein.
  • And there the path stretched straight and plain.
  • I saw at once the way to go.
  • The forest road I used to know
  • In days when life had less of pain.
  • Then I dismounted. Better so.
  • I had but little time to spare,
  • Since evening now was drawing near;
  • And then I thought I saw a sneer
  • Enter into that blind man's stare:
  • And suddenly a thought leapt bare,--
  • What if the Fiend had set him here!--
  • I still might smite him or might spare.
  • I braced my sword: then turned to look:
  • For I had heard an evil laugh:
  • The blind man, leaning on his staff,
  • Still stood there where my leave I took:
  • What! did he mock me? Would I brook
  • A blind fool's scorn?--My sword was half
  • Out of its sheath. I turned to look:
  • And he was gone. And to my side
  • My horse came nickering as afraid.
  • Did he too fear to be betrayed?--
  • What use for him? I might not ride.
  • So to a great bough there I tied,
  • And left him in the forest glade:
  • My spear and shield I left beside.
  • My sword was all I needed there.
  • It would suffice to right my wrongs;
  • To cut the knot of all those thongs
  • With which she'd bound me to despair,
  • That woman with her midnight hair,
  • Her Circe snares and Siren songs.
  • My sword was all I needed there.
  • And then that laugh again I heard,
  • Evil as Hell and darkness are.
  • It shook my heart behind its bar
  • Of purpose, like some ghastly word.
  • But then it may have been a bird,
  • An owlet in the forest far,
  • A raven, croaking, that I heard.
  • I loosed my sword within its sheath;
  • My sword, disuse and dews of night
  • Had fouled with rust and iron-blight.
  • I seemed to hear the forest breathe
  • A menace at me through its teeth
  • Of thorns 'mid which the way lay white.
  • I loosed my sword within its sheath.
  • I had not noticed until now
  • The sun was gone, and gray the moon
  • Hung staring; pale as marble hewn;--
  • Like some old malice, bleak of brow,
  • It glared at me through leaf and bough,
  • With which the tattered way was strewn.
  • I had not noticed until now.
  • And then, all unexpected, vast
  • Above the tops of ragged pines
  • I saw a ruin, dark with vines,
  • Against the blood-red sunset massed:
  • My perilous tower of the past,
  • Round which the woods thrust giant spines.
  • I never knew it was so vast.
  • Long while I stood considering.--
  • This was the place and this the night.
  • The blind man then had set me right.
  • Here she had come for sheltering.
  • That ruin held her: that dark wing
  • Which flashed a momentary light.
  • Some time I stood considering.
  • Deep darkness fell. The somber glare
  • Of sunset, that made cavernous eyes
  • Of those gaunt casements 'gainst the skies,
  • Had burnt to ashes everywhere.
  • Before my feet there rose a stair
  • Of oozy stone, of giant size,
  • On which the gray moon flung its glare.
  • Then I went forward, sword in hand,
  • Until the slimy causeway loomed,
  • And huge beyond it yawned and gloomed
  • The gateway where one seemed to stand,
  • In armor, like a burning brand,
  • Sword-drawn; his visor barred and plumed.
  • And I went toward him, sword in hand.
  • He should not stay revenge from me.
  • Whatever lord or knight he were,
  • He should not keep me long from her,
  • That woman dyed in infamy.
  • No matter. God or devil he,
  • His sword should prove no barrier.--
  • Fool! who would keep revenge from me!
  • And then I heard, harsh over all,
  • That demon laughter, filled with scorn:
  • It woke the echoes, wild, forlorn,
  • Dark in the ivy of that wall,
  • As when, within a mighty hall,
  • One blows a giant battle-horn.
  • Loud, loud that laugh rang over all.
  • And then I struck him where he towered:
  • I struck him, struck with all my hate:
  • Black-plumed he loomed before the gate:
  • I struck, and found his sword that showered
  • Fierce flame on mine while black he glowered
  • Behind his visor's wolfish grate.
  • I struck; and taller still he towered.
  • A year meseemed we battled there:
  • A year; ten years; a century:
  • My blade was snapped; his lay in three:
  • His mail was hewn; and everywhere
  • Was blood; it streaked my face and hair;
  • And still he towered over me.
  • A year meseemed we battled there.
  • "Unmask!" I cried. "Yea, doff thy casque!
  • Put up thy visor! fight me fair!
  • I have no mail; my head is bare!
  • Take off thy helm, is all I ask!
  • Why dost thou hide thy face?--Unmask!"--
  • My eyes were blind with blood and hair,
  • And still I cried, "Take off thy casque!"
  • And then once more that laugh rang out
  • Like madness in the caves of Hell:
  • It hooted like some monster well,
  • The haunt of owls, or some mad rout
  • Of witches. And with battle shout
  • Once more upon that knight I fell,
  • While wild again that laugh rang out.
  • Like Death's own eyes his glared in mine,
  • As with the fragment of my blade
  • I smote him helmwise; huge he swayed,
  • Then crashed, like some cadaverous pine,
  • Uncasqued, his face in full moonshine:
  • And I--I saw; and shrank afraid.
  • For, lo! behold! the face was mine.
  • What devil's work was here!--What jest
  • For fiends to laugh at, demons hiss!--
  • To slay myself? and so to miss
  • My hate's reward?--revenge confessed!--
  • Was this knight I?--My brain I pressed.--
  • Then who was he who gazed on this?--
  • What devil's work was here!----What jest!
  • It was myself on whom I gazed--
  • My darker self!--With fear I rose.--
  • I was right weak from those great blows.--
  • I stood bewildered, stunned and dazed,
  • And looked around with eyes amazed.--
  • I could not slay her now, God knows!--
  • Around me there a while I gazed.
  • Then turned and fled into the night,
  • While overhead once more I heard
  • That laughter, like some demon bird
  • Wailing in darkness.--Then a light
  • Made clear a woman by that knight.
  • I saw 'twas she, but said no word,
  • And silent fled into the night.
  • IN ARCADY
  • I remember, when a child,
  • How within the April wild
  • Once I walked with Mystery
  • In the groves of Arcady....
  • Through the boughs, before, behind,
  • Swept the mantle of the wind,
  • Thunderous and unconfined.
  • Overhead the curving moon
  • Pierced the twilight: a cocoon,
  • Golden, big with unborn wings--
  • Beauty, shaping spiritual things,
  • Vague, impatient of the night,
  • Eager for its heavenward flight
  • Out of darkness into light.
  • Here and there the oaks assumed
  • Satyr aspects; shadows gloomed,
  • Hiding, of a dryad look;
  • And the naiad-frantic brook,
  • Crying, fled the solitude,
  • Filled with terror of the wood,
  • Or some faun-thing that pursued.
  • In the dead leaves on the ground
  • Crept a movement; rose a sound:
  • Everywhere the silence ticked
  • As with hands of things that picked
  • At the loam, or in the dew,--
  • Elvish sounds that crept or flew,--
  • Beak-like, pushing surely through.
  • Down the forest, overhead,
  • Stammering a dead leaf fled,
  • Filled with elemental fear
  • Of some dark destruction near--
  • One, whose glowworm eyes I saw
  • Hag with flame the crooked haw,
  • Which the moon clutched like a claw.
  • Gradually beneath the tree
  • Grew a shape; a nudity:
  • Lithe and slender; silent as
  • Growth of tree or blade of grass;
  • Brown and silken as the bloom
  • Of the trillium in the gloom,
  • Visible as strange perfume.
  • For an instant there it stood,
  • Smiling on me in the wood:
  • And I saw its hair was green
  • As the leaf-sheath, gold of sheen:
  • And its eyes an azure wet,
  • From within which seemed to jet
  • Sapphire lights and violet.
  • Swiftly by I saw it glide;
  • And the dark was deified:
  • Wild before it everywhere
  • Gleamed the greenness of its hair;
  • And around it danced a light,
  • Soft, the sapphire of its sight,
  • Making witchcraft of the night.
  • On the branch above, the bird
  • Trilled to it a dreamy word:
  • In its bud the wild bee droned
  • Honeyed greeting, drowsy-toned:
  • And the brook forgot the gloom,
  • Hushed its heart, and, wrapped in bloom,
  • Breathed a welcome of perfume.
  • To its beauty bush and tree
  • Stretched sweet arms of ecstasy;
  • And the soul within the rock
  • Lichen-treasures did unlock
  • As upon it fell its eye;
  • And the earth, that felt it nigh,
  • Into wildflowers seemed to sigh....
  • Was it dryad? was it faun?
  • Wandered from the times long gone.
  • Was it sylvan? was it fay?--
  • Dim survivor of the day
  • When Religion peopled streams,
  • Woods and rocks with shapes like gleams,--
  • That invaded then my dreams?
  • Was it shadow? was it shape?
  • Or but fancy's wild escape?--
  • Of my own child's world the charm
  • That assumed material form?--
  • Of my soul the mystery,
  • That the spring revealed to me,
  • There in long-lost Arcady?
  • PROTOTYPES
  • Whether it be that we in letters trace
  • The pure exactness of a wood bird's strain,
  • And name it song; or with the brush attain
  • The high perfection of a wildflower's face;
  • Or mold in difficult marble all the grace
  • We know as man; or from the wind and rain
  • Catch elemental rapture of refrain
  • And mark in music to due time and place:
  • The aim of Art is Nature; to unfold
  • Her truth and beauty to the souls of men
  • In close suggestions; in whose forms is cast
  • Nothing so new but 'tis long eons old;
  • Nothing so old but 'tis as young as when
  • The mind conceived it in the ages past.
  • MARCH
  • This is the tomboy month of all the year,
  • March, who comes shouting o'er the winter hills,
  • Waking the world with laughter, as she wills,
  • Or wild halloos, a windflower in her ear.
  • She stops a moment by the half-thawed mere
  • And whistles to the wind, and straightway shrills
  • The hyla's song, and hoods of daffodils
  • Crowd golden round her, leaning their heads to hear.
  • Then through the woods, that drip with all their eaves,
  • Her mad hair blown about her, loud she goes
  • Singing and calling to the naked trees;
  • And straight the oilets of the little leaves
  • Open their eyes in wonder, rows on rows,
  • And the first bluebird bugles to the breeze.
  • DUSK
  • Corn-colored clouds upon a sky of gold,
  • And 'mid their sheaves,--where, like a daisy-bloom
  • Left by the reapers to the gathering gloom,
  • The star of twilight glows,--as Ruth, 'tis told,
  • Dreamed homesick 'mid the harvest fields of old,
  • The Dusk goes gleaning color and perfume
  • From Bible slopes of heaven, that illume
  • Her pensive beauty deep in shadows stoled.
  • Hushed is the forest; and blue vale and hill
  • Are still, save for the brooklet, sleepily
  • Stumbling the stone with one foam-fluttering foot:
  • Save for the note of one far whippoorwill,
  • And in my heart _her_ name,--like some sweet bee
  • Within a rose,--blowing a faery flute.
  • THE WINDS
  • Those hewers of the clouds, the Winds,--that lair
  • At the four compass-points,--are out to-night;
  • I hear their sandals trample on the height,
  • I hear their voices trumpet through the air:
  • Builders of storm, God's workmen, now they bear,
  • Up the steep stair of sky, on backs of might,
  • Huge tempest bulks, while,--sweat that blinds heir sight,--
  • The rain is shaken from tumultuous hair:
  • Now, sweepers of the firmament, they broom,
  • Like gathered dust, the rolling mists along
  • Heaven's floors of sapphire; all the beautiful blue
  • Of skyey corridor and celestial room
  • Preparing, with large laughter and loud song,
  • For the white moon and stars to wander through.
  • LIGHT AND WIND
  • Where, through the myriad leaves of 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.
  • ENCHANTMENT
  • The deep seclusion of this forest path,--
  • O'er which the green boughs weave a canopy;
  • Along which bluet and anemone
  • Spread dim a carpet; where the Twilight hath
  • Her cool abode; and, sweet as aftermath,
  • Wood-fragrance roams,--has so enchanted me,
  • That yonder blossoming bramble seems to be
  • A Sylvan resting, rosy from her bath:
  • Has so enspelled me with tradition's dreams,
  • That every foam-white stream that, twinkling, flows,
  • And every bird that flutters wings of tan,
  • Or warbles hidden, to my fancy seems
  • A Naiad dancing to a Faun who blows
  • Wild woodland music on the pipes of Pan.
  • ABANDONED
  • The hornets build in plaster-dropping rooms,
  • And on its mossy porch the lizard lies;
  • Around its chimneys slow the swallow flies,
  • And on its roof the locusts snow their blooms.
  • Like some sad thought that broods here, old perfumes
  • Haunt its dim stairs; the cautious zephyr tries
  • Each gusty door, like some dead hand, then sighs
  • With ghostly lips among the attic glooms.
  • And now a heron, now a kingfisher,
  • Flits in the willows where the riffle seems
  • At each faint fall to hesitate to leap,
  • Fluttering the silence with a little stir.
  • Here Summer seems a placid face asleep,
  • And the near world a figment of her dreams.
  • AFTER LONG GRIEF
  • There is a place hung o'er of summer boughs
  • And dreamy skies wherein the gray hawk sleeps;
  • Where water flows, within whose lazy deeps,
  • Like silvery prisms where the sunbeams drowse,
  • The minnows twinkle; where the bells of cows
  • Tinkle the stillness; and the bobwhite keeps
  • Calling from meadows where the reaper reaps,
  • And children's laughter haunts an oldtime house:
  • A place where life wears ever an honest smell
  • Of hay and honey, sun and elder-bloom,--
  • Like some sweet, simple girl,--within her hair;
  • Where, with our love for comrade, we may dwell
  • Far from the city's strife, whose cares consume.--
  • Oh, take my hand and let me lead you there.
  • MENDICANTS
  • Bleak, in dark rags of clouds, the day begins,
  • That passed so splendidly but yesterday,
  • Wrapped in magnificence of gold and gray,
  • And poppy and rose. Now, burdened as with sins,
  • Their wildness clad in fogs, like coats of skins,
  • Tattered and streaked with rain; gaunt, clogged with clay,
  • The mendicant Hours take their somber way
  • Westward o'er Earth, to which no sunray wins.
  • Their splashing sandals ooze; their foosteps drip,
  • Puddle and brim with moisture; their sad hair
  • Is tagged with haggard drops, that with their eyes'
  • Slow streams are blent; each sullen fingertip
  • Rivers; while round them, in the grief-drenched air
  • Wearies the wind of their perpetual sighs.
  • THE END OF SUMMER
  • Pods 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."
  • NOVEMBER
  • The shivering wind sits in the oaks, whose limbs,
  • Twisted and tortured, nevermore are still;
  • Grief and decay sit with it; they, whose chill
  • Autumnal touch makes hectic-red the rims
  • Of all the oak leaves; desolating, dims
  • The ageratum's blue that banks the rill;
  • And splits the milkweed's pod upon the hill,
  • And shakes it free of the last seed that swims.
  • Down goes the day despondent to its close:
  • And now the sunset's hands of copper build
  • A tower of brass, behind whose burning bars
  • The day, in fierce, barbarian repose,
  • Like some imprisoned Inca sits, hate-filled,
  • Crowned with the gold corymbus of the stars.
  • II
  • There is a booming in the forest boughs;
  • Tremendous feet seem trampling through the trees:
  • The storm is at his wildman revelries,
  • And earth and heaven echo his carouse.
  • Night reels with tumult; and, from out her house
  • Of cloud, the moon looks,--like a face one sees
  • In nightmare,--hurrying, with pale eyes that freeze
  • Stooping above with white, malignant brows.
  • The isolated oak upon the hill,
  • That seemed, at sunset, in terrific lands
  • A Titan head black in a sea of blood,
  • Now seems a monster harp, whose wild strings thrill
  • To the vast fingering of innumerable hands--
  • Spirits of tempest and of solitude.
  • 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 stands empty and his hearth lies 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 mold.
  • 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.
  • UNANSWERED
  • How long ago it is since we went Maying!
  • Since she and I went Maying long ago!--
  • The years have left my forehead lined, I know,
  • Have thinned my hair around the temples graying.
  • Ah, time will change us: yea, I hear it saying--
  • "She too grows old: the face of rose and snow
  • Has lost its freshness: in the hair's brown glow
  • Some strands of silver sadly, too, are straying.
  • The form you knew, whose beauty so enspelled,
  • Has lost the litheness of its loveliness:
  • And all the gladness that her blue eyes held
  • Tears and the world have hardened with distress."--
  • "True! true!" I answer, "O ye years that part!
  • These things are chaned--but is her heart, her heart?"
  • 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.
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