LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. i^ap4'"^- ^pi|n3^i ^^- blielf. .-I UNITED STATES OF AMERIC'A. INTERLUDES SUNG BETWEEN THE ACTS IN THE DRAMA OF TOIL By LEE O. HARRIS /3^72y' INDIANAPOLIS CARLON & HOLLENBECK, PRINTERS 1893 1' h't Copyright, 1893, 3v Lee O. Harris. (ii) Though this he but an humble thing To offer at the Muses^ shrine. Pray let your kindness give it grace, That it may fill some vacant place, Among the wreaths you twine. And though its bloom may not endure, I will not mourn its swift decay. If in your garlands I can set One sprig of friendship' s mignonette To blossom for a day. (iii) CONTENTS. PAGE. Songs of Nature '. i Prelude 3 Along the Banks of Brandywine 5 June 9 Moonlight in the Forest 12 Clover Bloom 15 Sunset Behind the Clouds 17 A Summer Night 19 The Wooing of the Wind 21 Dawn and Twilight 25 Shadows 26 Autumn 29 The Bonny Brown Quail 32 The Wind and the Violet 35 Sleighing Song 38 A Dream of Summer 40 Home and Affection 43 Prelude 45 Forty Years Old 47- Jaqueline ■■ 5° Bessy and Jenny 53 If I were Sisyphus. . 55 To My Wife 58 An Evening Picture 60 Rbtrospective 63 Prelude 65 The Harvest Days of the Olden Time 67 At the Meadow Bars 69 I Had 72 The Flower and the Star 75 Kate and 1 77 (V) vi CONTENTS. My Native Valley 79 Reminiscor, Deploro 83 My Castle 86 The Cloud Ship 88 The Spring by the Willows go Willow Whistles 92 Sorrow and Bereavement 95 Prelude 97 Dead 99 Nora 102 Tom May 104 The Empty Nest 107 The Two Mothers 109 But Yesterday iii The Song of the Rain 113 Flights of Fancy 115 Prelude 117 The Wind that Kissed the Rose 119 Love's Holiday 121 The Battle of the Wind and the Corn 125 Cupid and Death 128 Joy and Sorrow 130 The Birth of Poesy 132 The Interpreter 1 34 The Soul's Voyage 137 Echoes of War Time 1 39 Prelude 141 Roll Call 143 What Shall it Teach 148 Response 153 Miscellaneous 157 Waiting 159 What is Life ? 164 Jonathan Snow. 166 The Girls of the West 169 The Reapers 171 To W. H. G 173 CONTENTS. The Autumn Queen 174 The Dreamer 177 The Rose-Tree 180 To B. S. P 182 The Old Schoolmaster 1B3 Indiana 1B6 Crooked Jim 188 The Old Tramp 191 Let Them Go 194 Toil 196 The Morning and the Evening Star .... 199 Songs of Nature. (I) If thou art one who lovest not to hold Communion with the things of field and wood ; Finding no riches in the caltha^s gold, Nor treasures on the hill nor hy the flood ; If in the forest thou hast never stood To hear the great fond heart of Nature beat, Nor felt an impulse in the solitude To cast thvself in homage at her feet — Then go no further, friend, our journey is complete. But if there dwell an echo in thy heart For song of bird or laugh of water- fall ; If from the throng thou fain wonldst steal apart. And find thy peace where Nature'' s voices call ; Then art thou comrade for my journey. All The gold that misers dream of could not buy Such wealth of wide domain, nor castle hall So richly tapestried, as thou and I Shall find, my friend, with none our entrance to deny. (3) If thou hast sickened of the di{^j> -whirl Of Mammoii's ceaseless treadmill ; if thy soul Is gaining kinship with the ignoble churl IV ho scorns the lark and grovels with the mole ; If from thy shops the smoky shadows roll Between thy peace and heaven — then fly the mart, And let the hand of Nature make thee whole ; And all thy spirifs wounds will cease to smart, When she shall pour the oil of gladness on thy heart. It needs no rush of steam, no clash of wheels Through dusty leagues ; no toil to mountain height ; No loud Niagara, where the sick sense reels, Stunned by the foar and drunken with the sight. For he who reads the heart of Nature right Shall find the vales and hills of home-land sweet. No fields by day, no starry depths by night, Has Heaven vouchsafed, with rapture more complete. Nor beauty more than this that leans against thy feet. (4) ALONG THE BANKS OF BRANDYWINE. 'T^HERE is a stream whose emerald shores '^ Lie wrapped in Nature's primal shades ; High-canopied with sycamores, And set with maple colonnades ; There willows wave their silver plumes, And rushes to the breeze incline, And Summer sows a thousand blooms Along the banks of Brandywine. It has no tale of love and wrong To win from pity's eye a tear ; Nor classic story, told in song, To bid the pilgrim journey here ; But Nature, to her lover's eyes, Displays her beauties, all untamed, As in her natal paradise She walked, unclothed and unashamed. There Spring, while yet the fields are bare. And leafless are the upland bowers, Unbinds her wealth of golden hair, And twines her beauteous brow with flowers ; (5) ALONG THE BANKS OF BRANDYIVINE. While with low-whispered melodies She bids the sleeping calthas shine, And wakes her first anemones Along the banks of Brandywine. And by the pathway whe'e she treads, The yellow buttercups arise ; The fair spring-beauties nod their heads; The violets ope their azure eyes ; And red-buds, flushing like the morn, Beneath her earliest kisses glow, And nesting robins, from the thorn, Shake down a shower of fragrant snow. But, oh ! when Summer, clothed with grace Exceeding all that poets dream. Stands smiling at her glowing face Reflected from the limpid stream. The vale is clothed anew with bloom Of cardinal and columbine. And winds grow languid with perfume Along the banks of Brandywine. Then all the minstrel bards of June Sing melodies, so sweet and low, That willow-harps are set atune. And lioneysuckie trumpets blow: ALONG THE BANKS OF BRANDYIVINE. While leafy cymbals of the trees Beat out a cadence like a sigh, And wings of pollen-laden bees Make drowsy music as they fly ; Till cooling shadows lay their hands Upon the heated brow of day, And gather up the gleaming strands Of sunlight, strewn along the way ; Then where the softest mosses creep, And fairest virgin-bowers twine. Voluptuous Summer lies asleep, Along the banks of Brandywine. Nor is the beauty less complete When Autumn comes, serene and fair, With crimson sandals on her feet. And golden-rods among her hair ; Her face aglow with conscious pride. As one whose promise can not fail ; Her bounteous palms extended wide, To scatter wealth along the vale. Ah ! then tlie dews by Summer brought. To bathe the green of wood and dell. Grow ruddy as the vintage wrought By Cana's sacred miracle; ALONG THE BANKS OF BRANDYIVINE. And wash the maple leaves with red, And splash their crimson on the vine, Among the gold by Autumn spread Along the banks of Brandywine. And when the fires of Autumn burn The Summer's bloom to ash of snow. And from the stream the heart can learn A song that prisoned spirits know, A wealth of beauty still is found ; A countless store of sparkling gems, When all the kingly trees are crowned With Winter's crystal diadems. What worldly care hath sting or smart For him who wanders here alone, And feels the pulse of Nature's heart. Responsive beat against his own? Be Melancholy ne'er so sad. Her heart to joy must here incline ; And Sorrow's self may N\ell be glad Along the banks of Brandywine, 1893. JUNE. JUNE. SWEET May, upon her flowery bier, Lies pallid now, her scepter gone, And June, the queen of all the year. Has put her crown of roses on ; And round her lovely form she twines A zone of honeysuckle vines. Bright butterflies and beauteous things About her sunny tresses play ; The humming-bird, on trembling wings, With rapture meets, her on the way, And, drinking kisses from her lips. Grows drunken with the sweets he sips. The air is heavy with perfume. Where, underneath the locust trees, Or ankle-deep in clover bloom, She walks, surrounded by her bees. While winds that follow in her train Go sporting through the ripening grain. JUNE. She scatters blossoms, wijd and SM'eet, With lavish hand along the lanes ; And by the brook her rosy feet Grow redder with the berry stains. And buttercups, to see her pass. Stand tiptoe in .the meadow grass. She stoops in tenderness to set Her blossoms on the tomb of May, And plants the fragrant mignonette To hide the hyacinth's decay ; And hangs the morning-glory vine With tlagon-cups of dewy wine. The roses breathe a fragrant sigh Where their sweet peony sisters fell ; The languid poppy Ijiossoms lie Asleep on beds of asphodel ; And birds, too full of joy to sing, Sit, nestling, where the jasmines cling. And love-lies-bleeding on the spot Where early daisies wooed the bees ; And, sad, the pale forget-me-not Bends o'er the dead anemones ; And fair verbenas twine and cling Where crocus blossoms met the spring. JUNE. n Above the faded daffodils, Where lilacs shed their tears of bloom, The lily's swinging censer spills A dewy incense on their tomb, Till portulacas cease to weep And fold their-rosy hands in sleep. And Arathusa, by the brook, Has put her royal purple on, And stands, a queen, where Caltha shook Her golden tresses in the sun ; And willows all their harps attune In songs of welcome to the June. And I bow down before her feet, As pilgrim at some holy shrine ; I drink her breath with roses sweet As bacchanalians drink of wine. Till round my heart such raptures throng That all my soul goes out in song. 1877. MOONLIGHT IN THE FOREST. MOONLIGHT IN THE FOREST. r STAND where late I heard the twilight winds *^ Go breathing softly through the darkening wood ; They fanned the leaves asleep and stooped to kiss The nodding flowers good-night, and to the birds They sang a lullaby, then stole away, Silently, lightly, as a mother steals On tiptoe from the cradle of her babe; Silence and sleep on shrub, and flower, and tree — Beat low, my heart, lest thou shouldst break the spell. And mar the rapture of this sweet repose. Leap out, my soul, and bathe thee in the waves Of silvery light, down through the branches poured, Till o'er the ground a thousand rivulets flow, And wind among the trees their shining way. Or flood the pathway with a dew-bright tide. Save where the silent shadows steal across And leave their dusky trails upon the grass. Oh, fair enchanted land wherein I stand, 'Mid gardens richer fruited far than e'er Aladdin found within the wizard's cave! A mightier power than slave of lamp or ring MOO!^ LIGHT IN THE FOREST. 13 Hath waved her wand above the dewy wood, And lo ! a realm of beauty far beyond The wildest fantasies that Eastern bard Hath ever wrought from his voluptuous dreams. Behold ! these winding avenues of trees, Where every bending bough is fruited full With gold and sparkling gems ! where every shrub Bears diamond bloom, and buds of amethyst On emerald spray! dim-lighted aisles that lead Through over-arching vines to jeweled gates, That ope to courts and palaces as grand As e'er in Bagdad's days of golden prime Along the Tigris reared their gilded spires. Here curtains, woven of the gossamer, Are hung like veils of silver braid to close The way that leads to many a lovely bower, As fair as ever gemmed the fragrant vales Of Elburz mountains, where Circassian girls Breathe forth to Persia's odor-laden air The plaintive strains that tell their captive fate — That trembling sound ! was it a lute's low tone? Nay, 'twas a zephyr dreaming of the day, And, half awakened, sighing in its sleep. 14 MOONLIGHT IN THE FOREST. Oh, beauteous realm ! Fain would I linger here And sweetly dream through all the summer night. Alas! too soon the envious clouds have pressed, With jealous frowns, to intercept the moon — To steal her light to gild their somber wings — And with the fair magician flies the spell. The shadows o'er the jeweled aisles expand, And bower, and court, and gilded palace blend Into a hueless mass of dusky wood ; The waking winds come moaning down the vale; The leaves are all ashiver in the gloom : So fades the scene — and so our castles fall. 1879- i CLOl^ER BLOOM. 15 T CLOVER BLOOM. HE rose inspires tlie poet's song, And interwoven with his bays Its opening buds might well belong, Since he so sweetly sings its praise. The poppy has its chosen bard ; The daisy and the daffodil ; The violet, on the upland sward ; The lily, by the meadow rill. But who of all the tuneful throng That sing of beauty and perfume, Has deigned to hallow with a song Our Western fields of clover bloom ? Yet here are gracefully combined The daisy's worth, the poppy's hue ; And rivals here the rose may fmd In splendor and in fragrance, too. Oh, could I wake the voice of song That set the echoes all atune, And poured in witching tones along "The Banks and Braes 0' Bonny Doon," 1 6 CLOVER BLOOM. I would not chant, like Scotia's bard, Of hawthorn bud, nor tangled broom, Nor heather on the highland sward, But I would sing the clover bloom. Could 1 but wield the graceful power That won the Ettrick Shepherd's fame, And still endears that witching hour, "The gloaming, when the kye come hame;" My song should tell of winds that blow O'er fields of blossom and perfume, And raptured bees that, singing, go Among the fragrant clover bloom. Were mine each thrilling tone and word Of Erin's bard, whose art has set Her harp and heart in such accord They pulse and throb together yet, With strains of sweetest melody His glowing fancies should be blent, And woven into song should be The shamrock of the Occident. 1878. T SUNSET BEHIND THE CLOUDS. 17 SUNSET BEHIND THE CLOUDS. HE power that paints this glorious scene Is but the sun that sinks to rest ; Those are but clouds that intervene, Like gold-fringed tapestry, between The glowing portals of the west. And yet, in fancy, I behold The shores of some mysterious land, Through opening curtains that unfold On beryl walls with gates of gold That round a shining city stand. Yon cloud a mountain seems to rise With beetling crags and fissures wide; Its summit piercing through the skies Till all the hues of Paradise Come pouring down its glowing side. And just below a valley sleeps. Encircled by the mountain walls ; And there a rushing torrent sweeps Down cloud-wrought hills, and, foaming, leaps, In rainbow-tinted water-falls. SUNSET BEHIND THE CLOUDS. And yonder, in the golden light, A sunlit ocean ebbs and flows ; A vessel with its pennon bright, With crimson hull and sails of white, Across the roseate water goes. But as 1 gaze the shadows blend, And fold about each glowing hue. Like filmy curtains that descend To crown some pageant's glorious end With one last, grand, dissolving view. The mountain, of its splendor shorn. Stands frowning on a sunless plain ; The white-winged vessel, tempest-worn. With canvas rent and pennon torn. Lies wrecked upon a leaden main. Are those the lightning's gleams that run Along the cloud-built city's walls? That thunder — 'tis their evening gun, Saluting the departing sun — And so the shadowy curtain falls. 1878. A SUMMER NIGHT. 19 T A SUMMER NIGHT. HE day's departing aureole Blends into films of amber light, That down the sky like vapor roll, Fanned westward by the wings of night, As, flying over field and town, She lets her dusky tresses down. Along the hedge the fire-tlies glow, O'er clinging vine and creeping brier ; And thorns, that blossomed white as snow, Are clothed to-night with blooms of fire, That tloat on every passing breeze. And drift like sparks among the trees. A murmuring sound is faintly borne — A tinkling as of fair\' feet, From fields of yellow-tasseled corn, Where night-wind minstrels love to meet, And pipe melodious serenades Among the ranks of dancing blades. A SUMMER NIGHT. Oh, hour of peace and pure delight ! My thoughts are with the winds at play ; As witli the minstrels of the night I fain would sing my cares away, My heart, so lately sorrow- worn, Leaps up to join the dancing corn. 1877. THE IVOOING OF THE IVIND. 21 T THE WOOING OF THE WIND. HE Wind came through the woods a-woolng, Softly sighing as he flew ; Now, alas ! the flowers are ruing All his promises untrue. "Violet, with eyes of blue," Thus he whispered, gently bending, "Loving lives have blissful ending ! Let me live and die with you." Thus he whispered, sweetly, clearly, Vowing he would never stray. Till the violet loved him dearly — Then he laughed and flew away. "Slighted love hath bitter ending ! " Sighed the violet in her pain ; And, her modest head low bending, Never dared look up again. Then the Wind, his vow forgetting. Like a rover, wandered free ; Thought not once of love's regretting ; Recked not of his perfidy. THE li^OOING OF THE l^lhlD. "Anemone ! Anemone ! " Sang he then his song of wooing — " Loveless hearts are ever ruing ! Yield yourself to love and me." Ah ! she listened to the rover, Thrilling with her promised bliss, And, like maiden to her lover, Tiptoed up to meet his kiss. Vows, alas ! were vain to bind him, Trusting one, to love and thee. On he flew and left behind him But a dead anemone. Now along the brook he lingers, Where the golden cowslips gleam ; Where the willows dip their fingers. Toying with the laughing stream. "Caltha, love is all supreme! " Sighed the truant softly, singing: "Mateless spirits are but clinging To the heax'en of a dream." "Fairest of the spring's fair daughters ! " Thus the cruel flatterer said ; And her tresses swept the waters, As she bent her lovely head, THE IVOOING OF THE IVIND. 23 But he left her there repining, Weeping for his broken vow, And a trace of tears is shining On her golden lashes now. To the wild rose in the thicket Flew the rover, false and bold ; And the merry-hearted cricket Laughed to hear the tale he told. "Here a worshiper behold ! Rarest, fairest queen of flowers ; Fit to rule in Flora's bowers ; Worthy of your crown of gold." Then this most untrue of rovers Stooped to kiss her glowing face ; And the bees, her earliest lovers. Left her to his false embrace. Cruel Wind ! his song was tender, But he rent her crown apart. And he left of all her splendor Nothing but a bleeding heart. With the buttercups to dally. Flew the wooer, tickle, frail. And the lily of the valley Listened to his heartless tale. 24 THE IVOOING OF THE tVIND. Sweet forget-me-nots grew pale While they waited his returning. In her crimson shame stood burning Cardinalis of the vale. Clematis, no longer clinging, Yielded wholly to his will ; And he set the blue-bells ringing, As he swept along the iiill ; But when night came, slowly creeping Through the wood, the Wind was gone; And the flowers all were weeping When they wakened at the dawn. 187S. DAIVN AND TIVILIGHT. 25 DAWN AND TWILIGHT. I SAW the Night a moment stand, Expectant and athrill, While in the east a rosy hand Reached, beckoning, o'er the hill. And then I saw the Morn arise. Like Venus from a sea of mist, And blushes reddened all the skies, When Night and Morning kissed. I saw the Day, aweary, lean Against the western hills, An exile who, with stricken mien, His destiny fulfills. And then I saw a somber flood Of darkness wash the light away, And all the sky grew red as blood, Where broke the heart of Day. 1886. 26 SHADOIVS. A SHADOWS. S, where her sleeping infant lies, The motlier steals, with silent tread, To shut tlie sunliglit from its eyes, And close the curtains round its bed ; So Night, fond guardian of our rest, With noiseless footstep gently goes To drop the curtains of the west Upon a weary world's repose. On listless wings the winds go by, And softly hum a drowsy tune. Like tired bees that homeward fly, O'erfreighted with the sweets of June; And shadows, sifting from above. Drift slowly o'er the grassy lea, And seem to sink, and rise, and move, Like waves upon a twilight sea. Like banners o'er a parapet, They float above the garden wall ; On beds of fragrant mignonette, Like dusky swarms of bees they fall : SHADOIVS. 27 They nestle where the jasmine clings, And weary, fainting with perfume, They fold their odor-laden wings. And sleep among the poppies' bloom. Above the pansy beds they rest. They fill the lily's cups of gold ; And roses, by the winds caressed. Conceal their blushes where they fold ; Among the daffodils they lie ; They hang upon the flowering thorn ; Like giant birds of night they tly Across the fields of waving corn. Like curtains trailing from the sky, Along the vale they fold and sweep ; And in tlie forest where they lie, The night-winds rock the leaves asleep. Where, thrilling still with day's delight. The birds sleep, swinging on the limbs, And weave in dreams, through all the night, The music of their morning hymns. Along the meadow brook they spread ; The rushes nod beside the stream ; The poppy hangs her sleepy head, And all the drowsy willows dream. SHADOiyS. My senses feel their soft caress, And^thoughts that will no more obey, On wings outspread and motionless, Among the shadows glide away. 1878. AUTUMN. 29 T AUTUMN. HE glowing Summer spread her wings, And southward with the robins flew ; . A thousand sweet, familiar things, That missed her presence, vanished too. The blackbirds sang their parting strain, And sailed away across the wood. And Echo, listening long in vain, Sank voiceless in the solitude. The summer winds from field and wold. Fled down the glens with many a sigh, And Summer's sheen of molten gold Rolled southward down the paling sky. And now, brown Autumn hurries past; Above the wood her garments trail. And shadows from her wings are cast In dusky hues along the vale. She spreads a thousand brilliant dyes To flush the landscape, far and near, And, glancing backward as she flies. With glory crowns the dying year. 30 AUTUMN. She sweeps across the yellowing fields, She paints the wooded hills with brown The elms their leafy offerings yield ; The nut-trees fling their tributes down. The glowing wood, whose summer leaves A hundred mornings bathed in dew, That from a hundred summer eves Caught every glorious sunset hue. Now wears Aurora's crown of gold, And Vesper's robe of crimson dye, And all the colors manifold That flush along the autumn sky. The oaks in purple masses grow, And flame-lil