LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. ? S £6^3 i]^jt iiiM^t# l^J UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. POEMS POEMS JAMES RILEY %X^ Jl BOSTON CLEAVES, MACDONALD & CO. 1886 Copyright, 1886 By JAMES RILEY To AMOS H. EATON PRINCIPAL OF THE EATON SCHOOL MIDDLEBOROUGH, MASS. IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR CONTENTS Page Fancy . 9 Autumn Voices 11 Morning at Mount Tom 14 The Dollar . . - 17 Kite-Flying 18 Morning in June 21 A Leaflet 23 Pride 26 Booth . ; 28 The Miller in the Mill 29 Despair 33 The Brighter Side 35 May 36 Climbing up the Hill 37 Harvest Moon 40 Narragansett Bay 41 November 43 An April Day 46 The Sea 48 A Great City 49 The Book of Youth • 52 CONTENTS Page The First Day ...,,. 54 The Mirror , , , 56 The Hermitage • • • S9 Henry Grattan . .62 My Old Boat Painted Green 64 The Heights of Quebec 66 A Dew Drop 70 The Voice of the Waves 72 Irish America to Ireland 74 Lake Winnepiseogee 77 The Hosts of Ocean 79 Eloise 80 To A Friend 82 A Wintry Day 83 Our Little Mary 84 ■Grant's Grave 85 Fannie Parnell 86 Autumn . ^ . . -88 Farewell to Canada 89 James Berry Bensel . . 90 The Life we Live . . 91 To the Winds , . . .92 A Night Scene ... 93 Hazel Eyes 96 FANCY. Smiwng Fancy, come with me ! We will sit by the greenwood tree ; I will liear what you will say. First, begin with green-leaved May, When the streamlet sings new songs - I/ate released from Winter's thongs — And the robin sounds his lay, Answered back by screech of jay, And beside the half-hid brink Sweetly sings the bobolink — From his weed it sounds so clear ! — While the blackbird down the mere Joyous flaps his red-marked wings As the chorus sweetly sings "May, May! Beautiful, beautiful May!" FANCY. Then we'll talk of fair-eyed June, When Dame Nature, all attune. Spreads her fragrant, flowery leas. As the music of the bees Through the long day fills the ear, And at eve we seem to hear The dewdrop fall upon the rose. As Titania softly goes — Guided by the tinkling rill. When the moon comes o'er the hill, I/ighted by the firefly's light. Warning her of water sprite — With her fays, to hear the croon Of the brooklet singing "June, June, June ! Beautiful, beautiful June ! " AUTUMN VOICES. AUTUMN VOICES. When tlie torrid summer's day Passes with its train away, Then another, brighter theme lyightens every hill and stream, And the old time pleasures breathe Glories upon autumn's wreath, Coming modulated low, lyike the river's ceaseless flow. Or the tinkling bell of herd. Or the wing of weary bird. From the far-off rabble rout Hear the merry schoolboy shout, And the lumbering of the load Winding down the country road. Hammer, sledge and threshing flail Break upon the drowsy dale. Far across the stubble plain. Shorn of all its bended grain, To the farmer's merry htmi See the toiling oxen come. AUTUMN VOICES. All the ripened corn's aglow, And the bluejay and the crow Sound the cry, "We never yield "While nngamered rests a field." Pumpkins, in their regal state. Piled up by the barnyard gate ; Drooping orchards propped to hold Apples red, and green, and gold ; Shellbarks falling without sound, Open secrets summer bound, Every squirrel, leafy hid, . Chatters from his branch "You did!' There are voices on the shore, Echoing down the vale before, lycd by Fancy's fairest child, Piping woodnotes soft and wild. Piping till the gods of mom Answer o'er the tasselled com, Following on with footsteps bold, Emptying Plenty's horn of gold, And the crickets loud and clear. Chirping down the meadows sear. And the song of harvest bee, Sounding down the radiant lea. AUTUMN VOICES. I3 All the radiant fields ablaze, In the Indian-summer's days, I^ike the rainbow, promise themes Of the soul's bright earlier dreams ; While the sheaves that I^abor binds, And the horn the huntsman winds. And all praises of the air, That our earth can breathe in prayer. Sing the glorious magic time Wondrous to our Northern clime. In the night the cool winds blow. And the stars more brightly glow, And we watch the wheeling moon ; I/isten to the water's croon, And the wild owl's lone "Too-hoo," Kchoed by the elfin crew ; These are joys we e'er shall hold. Bound with Autumn's links of gold. .14 MOEINING ON MOUNT TOM. MORNING ON MOUNT TOM. I HAVB seen New England's valleys Blossom to the fragrant May; Stood upon her verdant hillsides, As declined the hour of day ; Seen her rivers, grand, majestic. Flowing on to meet the sea ; All her wondrous, cloud-capped mountains, Rising rugged, bold and free ; Watched Penobscot roll its waters Past Katahdin's snowy peak, Where the gloomy hemlock branches To the dark wave silent speak ; Where Monadnock meets the heavens, I have counted, one by one, Towers and towns upon the landscape, Resting in the setting sun ; MORNING ON MOUNT TOM. I5 Seen tlie Merrimac go sweeping Past New Hampshire's granite hills, Flashing, staying, onward rushing, By her thirsting towns and mills. Till it met the waves of ocean Beating up the sanded shore. Where the broad, blue, belted harbor I^istens to the ocean's roar. But the beauty of all others Breathed its incense on that morn. When to Mount Tom's peak I clambered. And beheld new beauties born — Hills that stretched in links before me, Waters stretching far below, Creeping down between the mountains, I/DSt in Autumn's distant glow. Rich vales lying in the sunshine. Rolling plains and fertile lands. Tinted oak and birch and chestnut, Harvest fields and toiling bands. Brightly shone the river flowing, Winding down the valley fair. Winding on to meet the morning, Ivost at last in distant air. l6 MORNING ON MOUNT TOM. Down below the smoke ascending From eacli chimney's hazy fold Showed me where in molten glory Holyoke lay in burning gold. Towers rising, spires gleaming, Golden vanes that seemed to blaze, All the wealth Aladdin promised In youth's joyous, distant days. Westward then I turned my vision, Seemed it but a step to go, Where a thousand feet divided, To the wagon road below. I/ike an arrow led the roadway, Straight into Basthampton town, To the red mills of the village. And the river winding down. Rose the sun to meet the zenith. Past from earth the mists of morn, And I saw Northampton city Guarded by her fields of com. IfCt our broad land boast her glories, l/ct the old lands point to theirs, All the world shows not the grandeur That Mount Tom in morning wears. THE DOLLAR. 17 THE DOLLAR. From the king on his throne, from the peasant who toils, From the lawyer who pleads in his choler, From the client who waits for his share in the spoils, Comes the cry of the crowd for the Dollar. As it ever has been so it ever shall be, While the heart to the head is a scholar, The Grindems and Grundy s by Nature's decree Shall worship the Almighty Dollar. A round bit of gold ! that is all ! yet I' m told That the world is built up by its glistening ! That the ching-a-ling-ling of this idol so old Brought the devil to stand at its christening. l8 KITE-FLYING. KITE-FI,YING. Little laughing youngster, Looking up in air, Lots of string unwinding, Lots of string to spare ; Airy elfins lurking In the bonnie blue Of your sparkling boy-eyes, Pure as fairy dew, — What a toy you have there, Soaring all the day Up to where the wild bird Goes to meet the' gray; Now 'tis in the sunlight. Now 'tis in the shade ; Give it line, my little lad, And don't you be afraid. KITE-FLYING. ig How it pulls and plunges, Shaking out its tail, Then away upon the breast Of the heaving gale, Up to where the white clouds Fleece to fleece unfold, Resting on the crimson, Near the shining gold ; There where towers toppling, Falling in the skies, Sails it o'er the snowy sheen, Soft as summer sighs, Past the ragged silver Letting in the blue. In far off, airy dreamland, Fading from the view. lyct the roving rambler Go to meet the sun, Stajdng till stars shine And the day is done. Let it wait till Night leaves Love to rosy Mom, Waiting till the gray dawn In the east is bom. KITE-FlrYING. Kite of magic motion, Boy of m.agic mind, Thinks the string unwinding Is a golden find. True, he never says so ; Silent is the voice, Until Fancy lends her wings. And shows her favored choice. MORNING IN JUNS. MORNING IN JUNE. The spider flings his network In patclies o'er tlie lawn, And one by one the stars go out, Before the rising dawn. The great green trees are sleeping OflF the lethargy of Night, And the charm of midnight greenwood Holds no more its fay and sprite. Sing, ye songsters by the river! Sing and sing from tree to tree ! Answer baqk, great blue domed Heaven, Mountain, meadow, hill and lea ! For the bride of day is coming ; Coming, fairer, sweeter, far. Than the moon of midnight beauty, Sailing o'er the fleecy bar. MORNING IN JUNE. Sailing up the blue depths ever, Sailing up, and on, and slow; Sailing as she sailed for ages O'er our little life below. Sing, ye songsters by the river ! Sing and sing from tree to tree ! Answer back, great blue-domed Heaven, Mountain, meadow, hill and lea ! Down the fragrant, dew-spread meadow. Out upon the blossomed thorn. Comes the song of Nature singing, Singing in the fair-eyed mom — "Where the revellers, new-throated, Sound reveille to the day; While the sky-lark, azure-winging, Answers back in wondrous lay. Sing, ye songsters by the river ! Sing and sing from tree to tree! Answer back, great blue-domed Heaven, Mountain, meadow, hill and lea! A LEAFLET. 23 A I.BAFI.BT. I WATCHED a little leaflet Go floating down tlie tide — On the clear, bright, glassy water It seemed a thing of pride — Till it met the circling eddies Where the great rocks lay below, When it shivered as it vanished In the river's onward flow. Then I saw it reappearing On the smooth stream far away, In bright, buoyant life and beauty, And this it seemed to say: "I am sailing, sailing, sailing; And I fear no eddying tide, Though my sister leaflets miss me, And the zephyrs oft have sighed. 24 A IvE;AI^I,Et'. I'm tlie little green-leaved treasure That was once the forest's own ; "Wlien I looked down on the river, From the tree where I had grown, Where, in calm, elysian sltmihers, Swung the golden robin low, From her silk-lined hanging castle Gently swaying to and fro, Dreaming of sweet orange blossoms, In a far-off sunny clime. With its birds of rarest beauty, I/Otus leaves and golden thyme. But alas, that life is ended ; I've met the biting blast. On the winds of fate I'm driven, Out upon the river cast." lyike this little fragile leaflet That went passing from my view, Are the hearts upon life's current That are ever kind and true. Sunniest hours have their shadows On the ever flowing stream. A i,e;afi,et. 25 That is flowing on and onward With the music of I^ife's dream. And though trouble may betide them, And sorrow's winds be drear, Still they'll sail to life eternal. With true Christian faith and cheer. For the great world's ever changing; It is not a mimic play ! And though memory has its idols, Life is real every day. 26 PRIDE. Pride; carves in art the blazing lie Upon the marble's base, And dreams the letters chiselled there Time's hand shall ne'er efface; Yet all the portion power and place And pomp of pride may win, Can never shrive the guilty soul Throned on its secret sin. Pile up your gold, ye miser minds ! Round out your narrow sphere ! God gave to man a higher place Than ye are holding here — To build on others' honest toil, To smile or frown for gain ! Coin, coin your gold from broken hearts, — Bach blood-piece holds its stain ! Think you to buy great Heaven's throne With record of a knave. When Crime has graved your brazen brow And Mammon holds you slave? PRIDS. 27 Ye may own the splendor of an hour, Ye may have your time and day, Ye may drink the draught that maddens, And play I^ife's little play ! Ye may dream, but dreams shall vanish ; You and yours be soon unknown ; And the gold for which your lives were sold Shall return you but a stone. Go, go to your forgotten graves ! The dust the cold blast sweeps Is all that's left above the ground When your proud spirit sleeps. BOOTH. BOOTH. Kings come and go, but Genius dwells Among the laurelled few Who roam for aye the haunted dells Where once the lotus grew. And on the beetling crag called Fame, The world below to scan, They write so all may read the name, "As high as this stood Man!" And now though England's bard low sleeps By Avon's winding way, The wizard's wand its charm still keeps While Booth remains to play. THS MII,I.:eR IN TH:e Mil,!,. 29 THK MII,I,BR IN THE Mil,!,. In the lone and silent valley, Just beyond tlie distant liill Where the deep and winding river Rambles by the dear old mill, Oft in boyhood's merry moments I have loitered hours away, I/istening, as tonight I'm listening, To the miller old and gray. Where the mill now bent and broken, Answered to the miller's lays ; Answered to the hand that lifted Up the gate that now decays ; When the farmer homespun coated. Drove up with his grist of com ; And the miller in the doorway Met the sunshine of the mom. 30 THE MII,I,ER IN the; Mil,!,. I hear the water in the wheel Go splashing loud and long, With the miller tightening up the stones, While singing some old song. I see him and I hear him, And I catch again the themes, That flowed as flowed the yellow meal From that good man in his dreams. I can see the hopper dancing, I can almost seem to feel The trembling of that crazy mill, With the whirring water wheel, And as the great wheel's turning I can see its buckets gleam, And from the open doorway Scan the bridge that spans the stream. There hang the iron steelyards, With their figured beam and poise, That weighed the com, the wheat, the rye. And all the village boys. And there the bags against the walls ; The high, old, oak settee ; The toll-chest, with the miller's toll, Which was the miller's fee. THS MII