PS 3545 .1357 H5 MTLK r Marian Warner Wildman Class -To^S^ Copyright N° A 5 fl^_ __ COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT A HILL PRAYER And Other Poems MARIAN WARNER WILDMAN BOSTON RICHARD G. BADGER The Gorham Press 1904 Copyright 190^ by Marian Warner Wildman All Rights Reserved LIBRARY of CONGRESS Two Copies Received APR 19 1904 Copyright Entry CLASS A. XXo. No. *) &*-*.") COPY B 1 ^°1 Thanks are due to the publishers of The Century Magazine, Harper's Monthly Magazine, The Criterion, The Christian En- deavor World, The Overland Monthly, Out West and other pub- lications, for permission to print in this volume work published by them and covered by their copyrights. Printed at The Gorham Press Boston, U. S. A. To My Father and Mother CONTENTS PAGE. A Hill Prayer 9 Blind 12 A Cycle of the Year I The Snow Storm 13 II On Winter Nights 14 III Conspiracy 15 IV Spring Signs 16 V In Protest 17 VI Little Pictures in Summer 17 VII The End of a Drought 18 VIII In an Old Orchard 19 IX September Morning 20 X October Song 21 XI November 22 XII A Winter Afterglow 23 God's Way 24 The Philospher 2"j A Parallel 28 At the Golden Gate 29 A Lyric of Falling Leaves 30 Undaunted 33 The Ghost of April 34 A Beech- Wood in October 36 The Gospel of the Trees 37 From the Dead 39 3 CONTENTS PAGE. From the Hills of Gold I Sierran Daisies 41 II In the Valley 41 III At Sunset 42 IV Sunrise 42 V Morning Song 43 VI Sierran River Song 44 VII In Summer Mood 45 VIII Wild Phlox 47 IX A Sierran Lullaby 48 A Heritage 50 A Nursery Song for Christmas Eve 52 Fairies 53 Betty's Butterfly 55 Elizabeth 56 God's New Year 57 "Friihlingsnacht" 5& The Shore Lark 59 Birds of the Mist 60 The Earliest 62 Birdless 64 The Spring Song 65 The Angel and my Song 67 The Mystery Tale 69 The Awakening — An Idyl of Spring 70 4 CONTENTS PAGE. "For Lo, the Winter is Past!" 73 "Where it Listeth" 74 With the Nightfall 76 Dirge for Summer yy Monochrome yy White Clover 78 A Rose from Home 79 The Brook 80 A Prayer 81 Easter Lilies 82 "He Giveth Snow" 83 Not His the Silence 84 Easter 85 The Wild Rose 86 The Death of the Wind 87 A Midsummer Lament 88 A Nocturne ' 89 He Does Not Know 90 A Memory of June 91 An Humble Valentine 92 In the Rain 93 To a Dragon-Fly 94 A Farewell 95 Great Salt Lake 96 From the Dark 97 5 Although I cannot tell it all — The dear green boughs that toss and swing, Where leafy shadows shift and fall, On leafy sunlight wavering; Although the music of the stream Has secrets that I cannot guess; Although the poetry I dream I have no language to express; Although they never could be told — The wondrous thoughts that dim mine eyes When at the evening I behold The golden glory of the skies; Yet must I sing. The love and pain That yearn to find one perfect word, And fail, and try, and fail again, In broken accents, all unheard, May yet from out their silence lend One tiny note to swell the throng Of choiring voices that ascend In rhapsodies of praise and song. A HILL PRAYER Here, where the light falls shimmering on the grass, Whose long green blades are bending to the breeze; Here with the flowers and butterflies and bees ; Here with the fair, slow-drifting clouds that pass And change the wavering light to wavering shade; Here, where my ancient oak-trees, rising, yield Their organ-musings to the strong, soft wind ; — Here, O thou Soul my soul has tried to find In man-made temples, in the open field, Down the hushed forest's leafy colonnade ; Thou for whose footprints I have searched the shore That lies along the ever calling sea; O Thou to whom I prayed that I might see But once Thy truth's Truth — know what I adore ! Here with Thy creatures, flower and leaf and bird, That share with me this holy hillside peace, Grant me from my long questioning release, And hear my new prayer — leave the rest unheard. Forgive the boldness of a heart that sought To know Thy name, or see Thine unveiled face; Forgive me that I tried to find a place To worship Thee, O Thou from out whose thought This perfect bud came, and the whispering leaves That bid me, "Be of comfort: Some One knows And cherishes the smallest flower that grows, And feels the trouble if a bird heart grieves." Forget my old presumption ; for I dared To question Thy great purpose; dared to doubt If God dwelt in my fancy or without, Or if there were or were not One who cared. And even while I prayed, I feared to see, Lest lifted veil should show an empty shrine; I dared to call my dreams of beauty mine, And half believed they were too fair to be. My dreams too fair to be ? The red-wing's notes Up from the marsh in breezy freshness ring; Among the willow-trees the vireos sing Their sweet, repeated warblings; yonder floats A snow of petals from a hawthorn-tree; Subtile and sweet the wild grape blossoms throw Their meed of perfume to the breath of May, And every sluggish little bud that lay Inert and joyless through the night of snow Bursts like my heart in springtime ecstasy. My dreams too fair to be? O Thou whose love Dreams beauty into being, makes it true — Those far white clouds that float across the blue, The sweet spring day here and that hidden dove; 10 I ask no more to see, to understand. Not yet, O God, not yet the unveiled face! Let me through many springtimes search the grace In one of these the marvels of Thy hand. What Thou art, I may never comprehend, Or whether Love or Law or God or Power ; What I am, in the passing of this hour Has ceased to matter; here my strivings end, And here, in blessing Thee, my soul is blest. Not for some far-off heaven's higher bliss, Not for some destiny that waits for me, Not for dream-gloried worlds that are to be, But for the simple loveliness of this ; Close to this throbbing hillside's fragrant breast, I love Thee, with a beauty-broken heart, And worship Thee, be whatsoe'er Thou art. II BLIND This much I know. Before the sky grew dark, When died the sunlight like a candle blown, And left my soul to strain and grope and hark, A captive, locked in some black tower alone; Before the curtain fell that shut me out From all I had been, all I hoped to be, — There was a glad, green world; a joyous shout Of strong winds blowing o'er a laughing sea; And there were green-gold fields of heading wheat, That ran and rippled in the passing breeze; And there were frail pink roses, wild and sweet ; And there were mist-blue hills and tossing trees; And over all, a brooding heaven blue, Where martins circled in the sunset light, And where the crying killdeers flashed and flew, And great stars shot their glory through the night. All this I know. And for the power divine To dream such pictures on the midnight walls Of this unwindowed prison-tomb of mine, I bless the Hand from which the blessing falls. I am content, O God ! content to know The sky still shines above my sightless eyes; That though my feet down darkened pathways go, Unseen, the Brightness round about me lies. 12 A CYCLE OF THE YEAR I THE SNOW STORM First the hush fell, when the north wind, Bleak and bitter, ceased to blow; Then from out the sky's abundance Came the snow. Faded is the winter landscape; Russet field and leafless tree Vanish, blotted out — forgotten Utterly. White the sky that closes o'er us; White as wool the earth below; White the air with countless legions Of the snow. Hemlocks droop beneath their burden; Dim and veiled by stormy hosts, Loom the slender, bending birches, Gray as ghosts. So the night comes, and the darkness Shuts the world out ; but we know, Ever softer, deeper, stiller, Drifts the snow. II ON WINTER NIGHTS Without — the dark, the bitter storm, the cold; Within — the firelight's glow of ruddy gold, To dream with me until the night grows old. 13 Slow, spiral wreaths of curling vapor rise, As frail as clouds that drift o'er August skies, Or purple haze on autumn hills that lies. Flames blue as moonlight round the gray logs creep; Bright sun rays, stored in sweet, dead summers, leap Once more alive from their dark prisoned sleep. And now the chimney's velvet dusk receives Gold sparks, like some gay firefly swarm that weaves Fantastic webs of light among the leaves. The fire's subdued soliloquizing seems A breeze that through the waving branches dreams, Or gentle murmuring of woodland streams. Soft, incoherent notes the gray logs sing, Crooned wood-talk of some unforgotten spring When they grew green in tender burgeoning — The snap of twigs where some shy creature stirred, The quick, low strain the mounting sap once heard And learned by heart from some sweet forest bird. So tells my winter fire its summer tale, Until, like autumn leaves, the red coals fail, Beneath an ashen frost grown cold and pale. 14 Ill CONSPIRACY Old hoary king, with diamond-crusted robe And ermined mantle, — tell me, were the trees Caught whispering some treason with the wind? As : "Hark you, brother ! he is growing old, "And rules no longer with might of yore. "See how the daffodils that used to cower "In terror lest he spy them, now put up "Their slender leaves unhindered. Hear the birds "That, tentative, the songs of April try." And then did they, the traitors, lower bend And whisper to the wind that ought to pass Yet lingered, listening, curious: how one, (The prince, they named him) had sent messen- gers To say he came with overwhelming force To wrest the crown and sceptre from the king? It must have been high treason, wicked trees! For lo! — the king last night sent out his slaves, Rain, Sleet and Frost, and bound your every twig In shining fetters that now weigh you down, You mad conspirators against his throne! Old cruel monarch! how he laughs to see The forest stooping 'neath its gleaming weight, Small saplings bending helpless to the ground, And all the world of boughs and twigs and vines A dazzling, rainbow-flashing fairy-land! Flow like a maiden, for her beauty sent To plead her people's cause unto their lord, That silver birch-tree bows her graceful head, 15 All glorious with jewels like a queen's, As if she begged for mercy and release From these so beauteous yet so irksome bonds ! Laugh loud, old noisy king! Your frosty breath But serves to shake new radiance from their chains; And laugh yet louder, lest you overhear Your captives, that with icy tinklings lean To pass the word a breeze has smuggled through, — "Have courage, for the prince is just at hand!" IV SPRING SIGNS By the northward-winging legions is it told! By each blade of grass upspringing from the mold; By the verdant, velvet freshness of the wheat; By the perfume of things growing, faint and sweet; By the glow of golden cowslips in the swale; By the waking of the wind-flowers in the vale; By the blackbirds' liquid gossip in the trees; By the far-off note of bluebirds on the breeze ; By the blushing of peach orchards, all alive With the whir of wings late prisoned in the hive; By the thrill of gipsy longing in the breast ; By our vague and nameless rapture of unrest; 16 By all glories of the vast awakening — This is April! this is Easter! this is Spring! V IN PROTEST Slowly — but more slowly lift the veil! My lavish, all too lavish mistress Spring! Pause, lest you overwhelm me with your gifts! Pause! for I perish, drowning in a sea Of beauty, gathering wave on wave, that rolls Yet higher on the unresisting shore Of old earth's winter barrenness, and breaks In foam of orchard bloom along the land! VI LITTLE PICTURES IN SUMMER Honey Harvest A brook that sparkling in the sunlight sings; A swaying spray of graceful columbine; A humming-bird, light-poised on whirringwings To drain the last sweet drop of golden wine. June Meadows A world underneath of white daisies; A world overhead of blue skies; And nothing between but a flashing of gold From the breast of a lark as it flies. Silver Maples A sky of deepest, rarest, summer hue; A host of little leaves, all still and green; A wind that wakes, and lo! a sudden sheen Like myriad coins, new-minted, 'gainst the blue. 17 Before a Storm Vast thunder-heads that to the zenith rise, Like snowy Alps athwart the noonday skies; And one great eagle, spurning earth, that seeks To lose himself among their dazzling peaks! VII THE END OF A DROUGHT "Bob White !" the quails are calling ; The clouds hang low and gray, And from the hot, still meadows The sun is shut away. Upon the vague horizon, The misty woodland seems Like the enchanted forest I visit in my dreams — So far, and so mysterious, Gray-veiled by distant showers, The borders of another And fairer world than ours. A tree-toad breaks the stillness; A sudden breeze upsprings, And bears the grateful fragrance Of rain upon its wings. Now fades my grove enchanted; Now fade the fields of grain; Now fast across the meadows Yet nearer sweeps the rain. Drink deep, O parching country! O flowers, be of cheer! 18 Lift up your cups and fill them; The rain — the rain is here! VIII IN AN OLD ORCHARD Oh sweet, calm passing of the summer day! On orchard grass the shadows longer lie; The insect chorus swells and dies away And swells again in sweet monotony. Each bird is silent, busy with its brood. Save when a pewee from his leafy lair Repeats his peaceful song in pensive mood — Then darts to seize some gauze-wing unaware. Through waving boughs I see the slow clouds pass; The breeze that nods the clover fans my cheek; And with the dancing shadows on the grass My fancy plays at games of hide-and-seek. Here is no fret beneath the orchard trees; No great ambition thrills my indolence ; My soul, contented with the world it sees, Cares not to question "Why?" or "Whence?" To-morrow I will reason. Let me be For once a simple worshiper, to lay My idle hours of idle reverie Upon the altar of the passing day. 19 IX SEPTEMBER MORNING Come tell me, O vagabonds true, What awakens our old gipsy yearning, So soon as September grows blue With the smoke of the far forest-burning? When the vervain is slender and tall, And the cardinal flares in the hollow, Whose voices are those we hear call, That bid the whole wander-world follow? Do we care that the springtime is dead? Do we grieve that the summer is dying? Do we sigh that December's ahead? Ah no, — we've no time for the sighing! We are off, with our woes left behind! Hearts as light as the thistle-bird's singing! We are off, with the sweet, smoky wind, Down the dew-sprinkled wander-ways swing- ing. The spider-webs, silken and gemmed, On the dripping green grass are a-shimmer ; By banks of bright jewel-weed hemmed, The little brown meadow-brooks glimmer. The wild morning-glories, milk-white, To the briars and thickets are clinging, Where dusty-winged butterflies light, And pause for a space from their winging. Will the butterflies die of the frost? And the flowers? — Ah yes, we remember, But heed not! The future's well lost In the shrouding, blue haze of September! 20 X OCTOBER SONG Oh these are the days when the hills are blue, And the forests are crimson and russet and gold, And the dead leaves fall, And the black crows call, As they wing their flight over woodland and wold ! Oh these are the days when the bluebirds sing, A faint, distant echo of dead April days, And a soft haze lies Over earth and skies, And the asters are purple along the highways! The corn is all cut and the pumpkins lie In a great golden heap on the granary floor, And the apples red On the trees overhead, Are juicy and ripe from the skin to the core. Oh these are the days when the squirrels and boys, From the peep of the dawn till the last of the light, Are at work like bees In the hickory trees, As they gather their stores for a cold winter's night. Oh these are the golden October days, With their falling of leaves and their gay har- vest cheer, And their smoky haze, And their dreamful ways, — The loveliest, mellowest days of the year! 21 XI NOVEMBER Oh softly tread upon the withered leaves! Wake not the sleeping dryads from their dream Of summer skies. Mark how the wind through naked branches grieves — How cold on fretted twigs the pallid gleam Of sunshine lies ! In fitful gusts the wind now snatches high The rattling leaves, to mimic cyclones whirled In joyless mirth; Now, wanton, flings them down again to lie All brown and by the frost's cold fingers curled, Upon the earth. The forest harkens, while the gray-boled trees That lately clad in rustling verdure rose, Now, summer done, Await, with patience born of centuries, The coming of the wintry days, and snow's Oblivion. XII A WINTER AFTERGLOW "Let there be light!" — a Voice saith. And be- hold! From cloud to cloud the radiant tidings fly; Above the naked trees and bitter wold, Above the bleak snow-meadows, gray and cold, A vast transfiguration thrills the sky. 22 Pale gold from west to east all heaven grows; Each wraith of mist is touched with amber light; A towered Valhalla in the sunset glows, All gold, pure gold ; till lo ! — a flush of rose Steals suddenly across the turrets bright, Absorbs, transforms and glorifies the whole, As when in some majestic symphony, The master-music of a master-soul, The chords yet stronger and serener roll, Then pause, triumphant, breathless, ere they die. So for a space the ruddy glories wait; Then back from east, south, north, the rose- light turns; Back in the mother west to concentrate, Back to one blazing cloud all roseate, That like a crimson banner flares and burns. Oh solemn passing of the winter day! Now, still as when some beauteous spirit dies, Through purple, violet, mist-blue and gray, The fiery pageant fades to dusk away. One white star trembles lucent in the skies. 23 GOD'S WAY In Memory of President McKinley "This is God's way!" — O great America, On whom God's hand has fallen heavily, Read yet again the last words of your chief, And find therein not faith, not trust alone, Not simple bowing of a will to God, But something more — a vision, prophecy ! Our way, could we have chosen, would have been To let the risen sun go down serene Into the west, so gradual and slow We scarce should feel the changes, scarce regret The sunset passing of an ended day, Since noon was half forgotten ere night came. God's way it was to strike from out the sky Our noonday sun and leave the zenith bare, That by the bitter darkness we might know How bright had been the shining that we mourned, The light too little heeded while it shone. Our way it is to shrink from present pain, From that stern travail of whose throes is born Some good our darkened vision fails to see. For pain is evil to our finite thought, And sorrow a destroying flame that sweeps To ruthless ruin all our hopes and loves. To God, our pain is but an instrument With which to work fulfilment of His plan. To God, our sorrow is the holy fire By which is burnt into our anguished hearts The lessons that, if learned less bitterly, 24 Had been forgotten ere we saw their worth. Upon our hearts, America, by fire, The fame of thy dead hero had been burned ; And in our loss, behold ! — a two-fold gain ! This first: we see more clearly than before How great is simple goodness ; how sublime Are knightly courtesy, a life unstained, A will that falters not before its God, A loyal heart that loves its fellow-men. And this the second lesson, dark and dread, In fiery letters written on our souls : Not one man's sin this crime that blots the white Of our fair century's just opened page! It is the sin of every age and land Where greed of gain treads mercy underfoot ; It is the sin of every narrow heart That harbors vice and fosters ignorance, And sows among its brethren seeds of hate ; My sin and thine, if we have failed to do Our part to haste the coming of the day When love shall rule the nations ; thine and mine, If we have set no hand against the power Of vice and folly, raised no healing cup To lips that, parched by poverty and pain, At last have opened to curse God and Man, And hail the lurid dawn of anarchy ! O world — O stricken nation, hear and heed This two-fold teaching of a martyr death ! "This is God's way !" Within the pregnant words A meaning yet more deep and vital lies ; As if, no longer darkly, through a glass, But face to face, our dying leader saw 25 The mighty import of God's purposing. God's way, mysterious, past finding out, Is this : to link foul cause to noble end ; To make Man's vice, his folly, cowardice, A blind, unwitting instrument of good ! The cruelty that bade wise Socrates Put to his lips the bitter cup of death, Had for its offspring words the tenderest And bravest that old Athens left the world. The vile ingratitude, the treachery, That make the name of Judas a reproach, Yet gave the work of Christ its final crown. So with the crime that lately has laid low Our beauty in high places, — though the sin Be black and grievous, from it shall be born A lasting good unto the commonwealth : Ideals nobler, government more just, And more of loving kindness among men. Thus from the two-fold lesson, writ in fire, Another and a mightier truth is wrung : Not good alone, but evil, pain and sin, Have part and meaning in God's perfect plan ; And evil, under God's directing hand, Shall work its own undoing, soon or late, When that which seemed but jarring dissonance Sweeps on to perfect harmony at last. Rise then, America ! Be brave and strong To face the future ! raise your stricken head, And say with him you loved, who lately passed Through that dark valley where the Shadow lies, "This is the way of God — His will be done !" 26 THE PHILOSOPHER After reading Spinoza's "Ethica" The one who loveth wisdom! Scorn him not Because he walks apart from common men ; Nor blame him if your anguish-darkened lot Wakes not his heart to answering throbs again; Nor pity him, because the blessedness Of human fellowship and earthly tie, The pride of power, the ancient, holy stress And war of good on ill, he putteth by. For most of us are strife and passion meant, And life by struggle and by conquest blessed; We seek the truth, toil-stained; with garments rent By thorns, through darkness, we pursue our quest. But he, self-lost, adoring, sees endure God's law alone, immutable and sure. 27 A PARALLEL A fragile shell upon the ocean wide, Wave-hurried, hurled by the unknowing sea; A slave to endless mutability; Till, rolled and tumbled by the heedless tide, It loses all the roughnesses that hide The lovely tints that underneath them be; Then by the inconstant waves cast finally Upon the beach to lie, storm-beautified. A woman's heart, by dreary stress of fate Tossed like the sea-shell, with no hope of rest Upon the ever-changing, changeless drift Of circumstance, till lo! — the surges lift And leave her, sorrow-perfect, in the breast That waits, as for the shell the warm sands wait. 28 AT THE GOLDEN GATE To Robert Louis Stevenson In from the ocean the sea-gulls are winging, Flashes of white on the heavens' far blue; In from the west they come crying and calling — Ah, but they cry us no tidings of you! In from the west course the great ocean rollers, Curving and combing in wind-driven spray, Bearing no more in their thunderous bosoms, News of the one who has vanished away. Out of our fair Golden Gate you departed; Ruddy your sails when we looked on them last ; Leaving us, lonely-eyed, gazing far seaward, Gayly, O light-hearted rover, you passed. Will you come back to us out of the sunset Never again? Is your journeying done? Or are you sailing, yet farther and farther, Down the long trail of the westering sun? Still from the west the white sea-gulls are flying ; Still the great winds range the wide, sunlit blue; But the sea-voices, all empty and meaningless, Call to your lovers no message from you. 29 A LYRIC OF FALLING LEAVES They cry as they fly: "We are free — we are free — we are free! Old boughs where we hung, good-bye! You clung to us long, for you bore us ; Naught now to your arms shall restore us; At last we are free — we are free! "In the spring we were born, In the year's blithe morn, And the forest rejoiced at our birth; And the sunbeams played All day with the shade We myriad made on the earth. "We were little and fragile and tender and green, (How loud is the call of the golden-wing!) And the musical rain and the glittering sheen Of the great white stars could filter between And drip to the earth below. (How wind-flowers shake to the breezes that pass! And oh — the spring-beauties that powder the grass Like a flurry of pink -flushed snow!) Sweet, sweet was the smell of the world in spring ! Sweet was the sound and the touch of the spring ! And we danced where we hung, And we sang as we clung; And fairer and broader and greener we grew, The long glad weeks of the May time through; Nor knew we at all that we were not free. 30 "Was it June? Was it oriole's rune As he flashed like a flower of gold? Was it something the low wind told, Some night when the air was wine, And the moon was ashine In the blue vault, dark and vast, And we held up our hands to be filled With the pure white light that she spilled From her silvery urn as she passed? Was it call of the sea From a sea-gull's throat? Was it thrush's note? Was it breath from the fields of grain That rippled and broke in the blast Like the waves of the windy main? Was it hope? Was it prophecy? "One knows ! Not we — not we ! But we knew, on a day, like the young Of the lark that grow tired of the nest And stir in a dawning unrest, We knew that we were not free! Not free like the gold-finch above us that sung — Not free like the clouds in the sky — Not free like the winds that go by! "Were we sad that we were not free? Nay — nay ! It was sweet to stay; And Life was good In the dear green wood; And we whispered and fluttered and sang as of yore — 3* But we dreamed, which we never had done be- fore; We dreamed of liberty. " 'Some day you shall go !' they said — The branches, our gray-breasted mothers — 'Some day when the summer is dead!' How closely they held us, O brothers! We cried to a wind that went through : 'Some day we shall journey with you!' 'Some day!' sighed our sorrowful mothers. "And all through the summer we hung there, Content in our curtained green peace; But all through the weeks that we clung there, We dreamed of our promised release. "It has come as we dreamed it, O brothers ! One passed with his torch in the night; And to-day we are all alight With tintings and colorings manifold, With orange, vermilion and gold — The garments prepared for our flight. "One passed in the night ; And he bade us: 'Be free! 'Lean now on the wings of the blast 'If you will! 'Or fall on the hurrying rill 'And ride on its breast to the sea! 'Behold — you are free at last!' "Oh the joy of our liberty, brothers ! O sorrowing mothers, Farewell — we are gone from the breast! We follow the call of unrest! "We ride on the winds that are blowing, Unheeding, unknowing The place they are going. O'er the shivering grass We race with the shadows of clouds as they pass. We rise — we rise — In the arms of the gale ! Against the gray skies We drive and we sail! O brothers, the joy of our being free! Our life was sweet on the gray old tree, But our death, our death is our liberty !" UNDAUNTED Far out on the sea, where the gray gulls play And the silver-flashing breakers shine, A white, white sail on the sea verge lay ; And I said to my soul, "It shall be a sign, "For good or for ill, of the hope of mine, "That lies, new-born, in my heart to-day." Then over the dim horizon line, And farther and farther away from me, I watched the sail, like a gull's wing, shine And fail and vanish utterly. But I laughed in the face of the empty sea, And turned me to look for a better sign ! THE GHOST OF APRIL There is a time, ere yet the chill November Has fallen bitterly on mead and hill, When April's ghost comes back to haunt her lov- ers, And make them dream that it is springtime still. Across the sky frail cloudlets float serenely ; The groves are veiled in misty, purple haze ; And in the fresh, sweet wind, a hint of promise Stirs subtile memories of April days. The corn is cut, and like to Indian wigwams The rustling, russet shocks in long rows stand; Great yellow pumpkins light the sombre stubble, And bounteous plenty broods o'er all the land. The orchards, heavy with their weight of ripe- ness, The vineyards, fragrant with their clustered store, The haylofts, heaped unto the great gray rafters, The golden wheat-bins — plenty broodeth o'er. By all these signs 'tis autumn ; yet the marshes Again are faintly vocal ; robins sing ; And hark ! the meadow-lark's clear, silver bugle As joyous rings as from the fields of spring. And sweetest, saddest, fullest of spring haunting, The bluebirds' warble : "Far — ah far away !" As if they too were lost in tender dreaming Of some fair, unforgotten April day; 34 Of that dear April day, when love and being Were blent together into perfect bliss ; Of that fond day, when Earth, the sleeping prin- cess, Awoke to rapture at the prince's kiss. To-day I found white violets in flower, Beside a roadway fringed with tarnished gold And faded purple asters. O spring's darlings ! Why this return, with autumn growing old? O birds of spring ! O April hints and meanings ! That come again, when summer flowers are dead, And summer birds, that thrilled the year's green noontide, To far-off groves in other lands are fled ; O April birds and ghostly April whispers, That bless and sadden these October days ! You send our thoughts, our memories, our long- ings, Springward again, by two divergent ways. Backward we look, across the perfect summer That wrought fulfilment of the pledge of spring ; Forward we look, beyond the desert winter, To April's songs and April's burgeoning. O April birds ! O hints of April promise ! O autumn violets ! Is this then all You wait to teach to us who are your lovers, Now April's self is dead and it is fall? Shall we, when Life's gold harvest has been gar- nered, (Is this your deeper meaning?) shall we hear 35 Thus, April's ghost, again the tender echoes Of our lost spring across the vanished year ? Beyond the frost (is this your deepest meaning?) Behind the death-veil that the Father willed, Wait there for us new springtimes ? other Aprils ? A vaster promise that shall be fulfilled ? A BEECH-WOOD IN OCTOBER Beneath the ancient beeches, cloth of gold For Autumn's regal passing has been laid. Gold sunbeams pierce the thinning golden shade, Where wider glimpses of blue sky unfold. No bird sings here ; and never light wind blows To stir the leafy curtains, golden brown, But still the ripened leaves drift slowly down, And still the carpet softer, thicker grows. Among the beeches Autumn does not die In crimson passion or in scarlet pain; Here only peace and golden silence reign, June dreams forgotten — winter fears put by. So would I die, O beeches! When at last My days are numbered like your ripened leaves, I would not be as one who idly grieves, And mourns the glories of the summer past. In peace and golden silence I would lie, Still gazing upward through the thinning gold, Until the last leaf fell, and there — behold! Beyond the lifeless boughs, God's open sky ! 36 THE GOSPEL OF THE TREES There is a gospel written in the trees, And I can hear it when the musing wind Drifts lingering, mysterious and soft Among the close-lapped leaves that rise and fall; And I can see it, when the morning sun Turns all the green to tender, lucent gold, And clear-cut shadows fall from leaf to leaf, And shift upon each other over me; And when at times, in utter weariness, I seek the shelter of the summer woods, The trees seem all to bend and breathe on me Its benediction from their outstretched boughs. Beneath some ancient beech I sit me down, And lean my face against the smooth gray bark, And close my eyes, — and then a low voice speaks That seems not all the breeze, nor yet the bird; That lisp and call in tender undertones. "Be calm, O weary mortal! Let your life '"Take root so deep in God's serenity, "No storm can break nor drought can wither you. "Let all your close-hid buds of springtime burst, "And let the opened leaflets spread and grow, "Until your life is clad in loveliness, "And birds that shunned your barren winter boughs "Come close into your breast to brood and sing. "Cast down your passions and your selfish fears, "As we in autumn cast our painted leaves "And bare our limbs undaunted to the frost. "Then, when the bitter winds of wintertime "Blow cold and colder on your shivering soul, 17 "Fear not! The love that shields the leafless trees, "And guards their boughs with moss against the north, "Will shield your naked heart and keep it warm, "And save you till the coming of the spring!" 38 FROM THE DEAD When my dust is dust again, And my face no more hath place In the changing ranks of men; When my soul hath taken flight; When my clay is laid away, Mould'ring in the grave's chill night; When all this hath come to pass, Then — oh then! blow soft again, Rippling winds that stir the grass! Rains and snows and dews that fall O'er my head, awake your dead! From its sleep my dust recall! Little roots that search the earth, Heed the cry: "Lo — here am I! "Dust that once knew mortal birth. "Take me — use me, hungry root! "Quicken me to herb or tree, "Bursting bud or springing shoot. "Lift me back into the day! "I would fain be bending grain, "Tossing bough or blooming spray, "Violet or goldenrod, "Oak or pine or creeping vine, — "Just a green blade of the sod, 39 "One of myriad maple keys; "So to feel again Life steal "Through my thrilling arteries; "So to know when in thy flight, "Swift and far from star to star, "Swerving earthward, spirit bright, "Thou dost visit grove and plain "That we knew when I and you "Were one shape who now are twain; "So to view again the sky; "Bear the beat of wintry sleet; "Watch the cloud-ranks filing by; "Harken when the wood-thrush sings- "Once more raise my note of praise "In the choir of living things!" 40 FROM THE HILLS OF GOLD I SIERRAN DAISIES O ye who rend the earth apart For hidden veins of yellow gold, And tear her ancient-seething heart, For ages past grown still and cold ; Come ont of all your tunnels black ! Throw down your futile picks and drills ! For here above, the wealth you lack In lavish splendor gilds the hills. Did God Himself stoop down to say, You golden, thronging daisies bright, Just where the hidden treasure lay That you have found and brought to light? What need to tear the mountain side ? What use of toil and sweat ? — Behold ! An El Dorado glorified — A solid hill of yellow gold ! II IN THE VALLEY A wind came down the mountain side ; And first I heard the far-off trees, And then the nearer ones replied In lofty, swelling harmonies. Then swayed tall pines before the gale, Like masts at sea in stately grace; And last the wind filled all the vale, Blew sweet and strong upon my face. Ill AT SUNSET Within this lonely, hill-imprisoned vale, I watch the sunlight fade and evening gray In dull, cold shadows settle 'neath the trees, Though yet the girding hills are crowned with light, Where towering pines still blaze in sunset fire. O shades of doubt! O darkness of despair! So grows my valley-life dim; night is come, While yet my longing, lifted eyes can see, Far over me, the joy, the light, the hope — The golden glory of the vanished sun — God's peace upon the heights I cannot climb! IV SUNRISE Far over the mountains that girdle the valley, To eastward the heavens are paling with light. Down here in their legions the dull shadows ral- iy And close to defend the last stronghold of Night. A shuddering wind is awake in the cedars, And sudden, swift fears through the foliage stir; Now marshal your forces, you ghostly gray leaders! Stand round your dark mistress — die fighting for her! Too late! On the heights where the giant pines tower, Aflare on their summits, a banner of gold Waves death to the shadows, turned craven, that cower, And sicken in crannies, and hide, and grow old. From hill-crest to crest flies the light on strong pinions; The valley is circled and crowned with the sun; Dark Night in her stronghold lies slain with her minions — The reign of the conqueror Day is begun! V MORNING SONG Down the hills the sunrise light Slants between the lofty pines, Puts the purple shades to flight, Through the manzanitas shines ; Dapples all the river o'er, Flecks its clear, brown bed with gold, Till the pebbles, dull before, Shine in colors manifold. Rays from off the sparkling stream On the roofing alders dance, Flicker, vanish, waver, gleam, In reflected radiance, Till the leaves seem all aquiver, As at passing of a breeze, Though they hang above the river, Motionless upon the trees. 43 "Morning, morning, fresh and sweet!" Sings the river o'er the stones ; And the shy towhees repeat, "Sweet !" and "Sweet !" in undertones. Blue and breathless is the sky, Forecast of the heat of noon. Sing, O earth ! the dew will dry On the lilies, oversoon ! VI SIERRAN RIVER SONG No more, no more the fretful world for me! Thy sprite am I, O river! I shall lie All day and dream beneath this alder-tree, As idle as yon gold-winged butterfly, That floats and wavers in the velvet air, And drifts from flower to flower without a care. Why hurry by so swiftly, rushing stream? There where those broad-leaved maple branch- es bend Are cool, brown shallows, and a softened gleam, Where light and shade in wavering circles blend, Vague fantasies by sun and leafage lent To woo the lazy ripples to content. 44 Then to the sunshine, river! Dreaming o'er, Glide smoothly down the shining golden sands, To leap in foamy raptures as before And, laughing, toss bright spray-gems in your hands. A passing breeze the maple branches lifts, And every sun-flecked shadow fades and shifts. The azure dragon-fly with filmy wings, That veers and darts and settles and is gone; The bright-eyed bird that in the alder sings, The fairy clouds, the winds that waft them on, Combine and mingle in a perfect whole — An utter restfulness that steeps my soul. Here in the moist sand by the river's brink The tracks of some small forest creature show, That came last night your crystal draught to drink, The fresh, pure offering of the mountain snow. So I, O stream, who lean to you and brood, Drink deep of peace in this sweet solitude! VII IN SUMMER MOOD It is thus I love you best, O my river ! When upon your tranquil breast Shadows quiver: Shadows falling, sifting, shifting, As the trees Yield their verdure to the lifting Of the breeze, 45 Till my curtains gold and green, Unresistant, Part to show the sky between, Blue arid distant. Happily, alone together, You and I Watch the sweet midsummer weather Loiter by. As you linger, pause, and dream, Oft I wonder : Can you be the selfsame stream Used to thunder Down your swollen, snow-fed courses In the spring, With your waves, like foaming horses, Galloping O'er the rugged mountain path, Granite-bouldered, While you tore the trees in wrath, That you shouldered? Now you glide o'er sand and pebble Soft and slow, In a tender ripple-treble Singing low ; And, a slender, silver stream, Wind and shimmer; Down through mimic canons gleam, Flash and glimmer; Deep among the channeled boulders Romp and run, 'Neath the moss that dries and moulders In the sun. O'er your brown and shadowed pools, Frail wings hover; And the trout in silver schools Dart to cover, 46 Starting waves in all directions Like a breeze — Shivering the green reflections Of the trees. Ah, the springtime ! You and I Know its passion ; But 'tis sweeter thus to lie, Summer fashion, While the leafy shadows quiver On your breast, And o'er all our world, O river, Broodeth rest. VIII WILD PHLOX Oh would I were painter to paint you ! Or would I were bard to sing The charm of your delicate beauty, Bright may of our western spring ! If I were a painter, a hillside Should under my brushes grow, Where, centuries old, the dark pine-trees Their quivering shadows throw; Snow-gleams from far distant Sierras Should flash their great trunks between; And under their boughs the dull tar-weed Should carpet the slope with green. Then, rosy as clouds of the sunset And fresh with the mountain showers, Should bloom here and there on my canvas A flushing of starry flowers. 47 Or were I a poet, I'd sing you, In song- that was tender, sweet, And fair as the fragilest cluster Low blossoming- at my feet. I'd liken you unto a maiden, Who dwells from the world apart; Like you, in her loveliness hiding; Like you, with a pure, white heart. Because of my love I would sing you; And something between the lines Should hint of a balm-breathing fragrance From boughs of the sun-kissed pines; Should whisper of far forest places That Spring with her glory thrills; Should sing of the hush and the healing That wait in the flower-clad hills. IX A SIERRAN LULLABY Sleep — oh sleep! By a trail that is wild and steep, The last red sunbeams climb, Little child, from the purple vale At sunset time. Steep and wild, Up the forest-clad heights, O child! The manzanitas gray And the birches along the trail Have lost the day. 48 Rest — ah rest! Now afar on the farthest crest Great pines have caught the light! Now they darken, the gold rays fail And fade to night. Hark — oh hark ! How the wind in the pine boughs dark A wild, sweet music thrills! Sleep — sleep, till the stars grow pale Above the hills. 49 A HERITAGE All day long, the brown leaves, falling, I heard calling, Calling softly, plaintively: "Where is she who used to love us? "Now above us "Broods October, her beloved. Where is she? "All the springtime we were waiting; "Birds were mating, "And the violets were blue. "All the summer, — 'Is she coming?' "Bees were humming, "Balmy, clover-scented meadows roaming through. "'Tis our golden time of dying; "We are lying, "Carpeting the woodland ways; "Soon the snows will come to cover, "Vanished lover, "All the red and russet glory of our days." All day long, the ripples, playing, I heard saying As they laughed along the sand: "Surely he will come to-morrow! "Shall we sorrow, "When the one who used to seek us is at hand? "In the hazy, golden weather, "Is there tether "That can hold him from the sea, "Where the smoky breezes, swelling, 5° "Care dispelling, "Waft his boat, a skimming sea-gull, far and free?" Harken, waves ! and cease your calling, Sad leaves falling! They are over far to hear; But I know their hearts are turning Toward you, yearning, At this mellow, mystic passing of the year. And the stars that westward wander, Know, far yonder, Girded by the ancient hills, Of a cradle ever swinging To the singing Of the pine boughs, and the swift Sierran rills. In the baby soul there sleeping, Bud-like keeping All its secret beauty sealed, Shall the tender forest-sadness, The sea-gladness, Of our golden eastern autumn be revealed. A NURSERY SONG FOR CHRISTMAS EVE Hush, children all! Lay down your heads Upon your pillows soft and white! The Christmas angels round your beds Will hover singing all this night. Without, the snow lies cold and deep; Without, the bleak wind frets and calls; But here, around your happy sleep, The angels walk, with soft footfalls. Your heavy lids will not unclose To see their snowy, half-furled wings, Their trailing garments, flushed with rose Beneath the glow the firelight flings. You will not see the star of light That o'er each angel's forehead beams, But something of its radiance bright Shall mingle with your Christmas dreams. At dawn each silver star and wing Will fade and vanish quite away; But strains of what the angels sing Shall echo through your Christmas day. Then silence — O ye children dear! The angels wait outside your door; Shut close your eyes — and you shall hear Their long robes trailing on the floor! 52 FAIRIES Heigho — the fairies! the little white fairies! Fairies that dance by the light of the moon, Chase the red lantern the firefly carries, Rollick and frolic the night long in June. Far away, faint, comes the ring of their laughter, Borne on a breeze they have startled from sleep; Laughter that mocks me for following after, Trying to spy on the revels they keep. Glint of a snowy wing — see, in the thicket! 'Tis but a moon-flower, scentless and pale. Hark — a low cry like the chirp of a cricket ! Who is it rides on the wings of the gale? Down through the woodland their footsteps I follow, Weary and footsore and clumsy and slow; Torn by the brambles of hillside and hollow, Through the sweet nights of the summer I go Daily I vow to give up the vain quest of them; Nightly I break the wise vow that I made, Hoping 'gainst hope I may yet get the best of them, Sometime repay them the pranks they have played; Sometime steal up to them ere they can spy me, (Oh for some fern seed to drop in my shoe!) Hide in the leaves there with none to deny me, Find out at last what it is that they do. 56 Do they string dewdrops to hang on the flow- ers? Do they bring toadstools and sit in a ring? Do they have balls in the moon-lighted bowers? What are the words of those songs that they sing ? — Songs that allure when I catch but a tone in them, Songs of a singer already a-wing, Songs of delight with a hint of a moan in them, Faint as a breeze in a violin string. Heigho — the fairies! that joy in devising me Ever new lures to deprive me of rest! Fairies that, mocking me, taunting, enticing me, Start me afresh on my lunatic quest ! Woodland and briar-path, youthful and cheery, Up from the valley and down from the hill; Racing them — chasing them, gray-haired and weary ; Down to my grave I shall follow them still! 54 BETTY'S BUTTERFLY Baby Betty, plucking flowers From the grass before the door, Spied to-day a kind of blossom She had never seen before. Betty's own eyes were not bluer Than the flower they smiled upon; Betty clapped her hands, delighted — And alas ! the flower was gone ! Clovers, buttercups and daisies Meekly in their places stay; "Why," sweet Baby Betty pondered, "Did my blue flower fly away?" Till at last she solved the problem, And the clovers overheard, "Oh, I thought it was a flower, "But I guess it was a bird!" 55 ELIZABETH From the German of Theodor Storm Here on the noon-hushed hillside, The wind to rest beguiled, The leafy twigs hang drooping; Beneath them sits the child. Amid the wild thyme's fragrance She sits; the perfumed air Is filled with insects, humming And glistening everywhere. How silent lies the forest! How woodland-rapt her gaze! On her brown hair the sunshine A tender glory lays. Far off — the cuckoo's laughter! I think, in still surprise, Her eyes are golden — golden, Like the Forest-Maiden's eyes ! 56 GOD'S NEW YEAR God's New Year! Sing it soft, O happy birds! Why heed the cynic calendars that say In bitter wintertime falls New Year's day? "In wintertime," they say, (heed not their words !) "New years are born, — in winter old years die, "North winds alike for dirge and lullaby." To-day the year is new ! when first the sun Awakes the languid earth to thrill and glow And put from her warm breast the shrouding snow. To-day when free at last the glad brooks run, To-day when first the field-lark greets the morn — To-day with life, love, hope, the year is born ! 57 "FRUHLINGSNACHT" Ah April, sweet April ! the whole morning long The world was a riot of beauty and song! The scent of white lilacs was warm on the breeze ; The robin called loud from the little-leaved trees; And meadow-larks thrilled their long flute-notes serene Through fields that were mad with a passion of green. But now, in the night, when the birds are all still, And south winds are roving from hill unto hill, The sweetest, the saddest, the tenderest strain That tells of spring rapture, is lifted again. O scorned little bards ! do your tiny souls yearn With some of our longing at springtime's re- turn? Like us, are you seeking escape from flesh- bonds, O mournful, sweet choir of the marshes and ponds? 58 THE SHORE LARK "Their flight and manner in song is much like that of the skylark. . . . I know of no bird- song that seems so obviously struggling to free itself and reach a fuller expression." John Burroughs Thou simple minstrel of the hazy blue! I saw thee mount on eager wing elate; I saw thee dare yon azure heaven's gate, Like him, thy cousin Skylark, Shakespeare knew And watched long since, sun-blind, as I watch you. I saw how thy swift wingings alternate With blessed lulls, when thy blithe pinions wait, For rapture stilled, until thy song be through. And then, from that far, sunlit height I heard Thy futile warble, poor and incomplete. Why must thou dare the Skylark's realm, rash bird? Poor lark — poor songless soarers, thou and I ! On earth, perchance, our strains had sounded sweet; But ah, it called us, called us — the blue sky! 59 BIRDS OF THE MIST The mists of Niagara are haunted by hundreds of swallozus. O you who look down, Till your senses drown In the maddening, dizzying thunder and roar Of floods that, tumultuous, haste evermore To their falling — falling — falling; You men who can only surmise What lies Forever shut out from your human eyes By the wavering mists that are seemingly free, But are chained to the rocks for eternity; You creatures that shrink From the terrible brink Of the waters that curve of a sudden, and sink, And go down — down — down, to the chasm be- low, So wondrously, gracefully, buoyantly slow, 'Tis an age till they're lost in the eddies of snow, Where the whirlpool is mightily calling ; — Behold us — the birds of the mist ! Far up with the spray we blow! With its billowing clouds we arise, Till we see through the vapor the blue of the skies, And higher and higher the white mist springs, Till the sunshine is hot on our drenched wings ! Can you know, you who stay Where the fringe of the spray 60 Will but moisten your face if the wind is your way, Can you guess the mad joy that we feel, As we circle and wheel, As we flutter and soar Through the blinding mist By the torrent-bow kissed Into emerald, ruby and amethyst, That rises and broods o'er the wild uproar? Close — close to the curve of the falls we fly, The smooth green curve with the touch that is doom; But we pay it no heed in our passing it by, Save to give it a wing's-breadth room. We are mad with the joy of the falling! Glad sprites of the mist are we! All day we play, Delirious, free, In the leaping spray ; All day we circle and soar, With shining, wet plumage and glistening breast; All day — all day — for we cannot rest In sight of the waters in white uproar, In the sound of the cataract's calling: ! 61 THE EARLIEST Chilly and cheerless the March breezes blow; Gray are the skies with a promise of snow; Never, ah never will old winter go ! Spring has forgotten to come! Weary and sorrowful, dreary and long, Drags the cold winter, and life has gone wrong; Mourning for laughter, and silence for song; Earth and her voices are dumb. Truly the Father is hardest to find Days when the world is so cold and unkind, Days when our eyes that have seen, become blind, Days when our spirits are numb. But lo! — on the silence and cheerlessness rings The meadow-lark's bell and the song-sparrow sings, And a message of hope to the weary heart flings, From out the bare twig where he clings. While, "Listen, poor mortal!" the bold robins say, Brave-hearted and loud from the uppermost spray, "The darkest of night is the dawn of the day, "And March is the brother of May!" Then up from the orchard deserted and bare, The tenderest voice in the bird chorus there, 62 A bluebird trills on the frost-laden air, And warbles the slumberless care : "You coward, oh hark to the song that I sing ! "Soon cometh the time of the blossoming; "Soon cometh an end to your sorrowing; "And after the winter — the spring! "And then shall all hunger and trouble and snow "All pain and all weariness, vanish and go! "Know ye the way that we bluebirds know? "Tis God who hath told us 'tis so." Winds from the north, and the snow flurries fly, Chilly and raw from the dun-colored sky; Still fast asleep the blue violets lie; Tarrieth long the dear spring. But out of a heart that was weary and worn. The grief on the wing of a bird has been borne, And my soul sings as soft as the bluebirds sing, "Soon cometh the time of the blossoming!" 63 BIRDLESS This is the birdless season — empty trees, Bare orchard, lonely mead! Above the snow-drifts, gone-to-seed Dry weed-stalks rattle in the breeze, Where companies Of gay tree-sparrows twitter as they feed. This is the birdless season. Clouds hang gray. Hued like the summer sky, With haughty crest and royal eye, Across the snow-glare of the day A splendid jay Wings to the spruces with his strident cry. High o'er the lowland field a lone hawk wheels In watchful circles slow, And scans the lifeless plain below In anxious searching for his scanty meals. From far, there steals Upon the hush the cawing of a crow. This is the birdless season ! 'Neath the hedge The merry juncos meet To mine the snow with tiny feet In search of forage. From the sedge At the stream's edge, A tufted titmouse whistles loud and sweet. Among the boughs, with soft contralto calls, Flits restless chickadee; And from the leafless maple-tree The ros> -plumaged cardinal's Fine rhapsody Of mellow, lyric sweetness blithely falls. 64 Nuthatches clamber o'er the lichened bark Of gnarly limbs, to seek Their prey, and curiously peek In mossy crevice, cranny dark; While near them — hark! The tap — tap — tapping of the downy's beak! This is the birdless season — silent, drear? Ah leave your hearth's red glow, Your closet grief for choirs that go When summer roses disappear! Come forth — and hear This brave song-sparrow, singing in the snow ! THE SPRING SONG O friend of mine, whom the jealous miles Have crowded out from my daily sight — This memory comes in quiet whiles : A grove in the spring, in the young sunlight ; And you and I, where the hill-path led; And boughs that were turning a tender green On the old trees arching overhead; The glint of the morning sky between; The spice-bush twigs ashine with dew; The thrushes at work in the wet, brown mold; And through the woods, and our own souls through, The voice of an unknown bird, that told The joy of the spring that our hearts had known; As wild and simple and sweet and glad, With its hint of pain for an undertone, As the plaint of a wandering oread. 65 Across the hillside — among- the trees, Till the morning sun rose high, We followed the song that on every breeze Was lifted, to linger, and pass us by ; But the hidden singer whose song had wrought Mysterious charm in the solitude, Eluded ever our eyes that sought For the prophet of our April mood. Was it only the voice of an unseen bird, In matin hymns to the God of spring? Or was it the soul of the woods we heard, Giving voice to our silent worshiping? O friend of mine ! though the jealous miles May keep asunder you and me, If you remember, in quiet whiles, We meet in a mutual memory. 66 THE ANGEL AND MY SONG I said unto the Angel: "Shall I sing "Of Love, the wondrous?" "Hast thou loved?" he said. "Not yet!" I answered; and he shook his head. "Shall I then sing of Death, the pitiless?" "What knowest thou of Death?" the answer came. I bowed my head : "I have but heard his name. "What wouldst thou, Angel? Shall I sing of God, "From whose great thought the universe is sprung?" The Angel smiled. "How strong is thy lyre strung?" "Then must I cease my singing?" "Nay," he said, "Thou canst not!" and he smiled again; "but lo! "Thou shalt sing only that which thou dost know." He vanished; and I took my lyre and sang — Sang, as the birds sing, of the things I knew: Of storms and stars ; of Ocean's wind-swept blue; I sang the freshness of the early morn ; I sang of grass and trees and low-voiced streams; I sang my hopes, my heart-beats and my dreams. 6 7 And when at last I dropped my quivering lyre, There stood my smiling Angel, and he leant And gave to me my fallen instrument. "Sing now," he said, "of Death! Of Love sing now !" "Nay, Angel! for I know them not!" I cried; Then turned — and found them standing at my side! And when I, knowing, had sung Death and Love, "Sing now of God!" he bade me. "Nay," I plead, "Too frail my lyre is!" "Child!" he smiled and said, "Hast thou then sung of Love and Death and stars — "Hast thou then sung blue skies and springing sod, "And dost thou dream thou hast not sung of God?" 68 THE MYSTERY TALE A marvelous work is the Tale of the World ! It is wrought with a wonderful art, From the chapter on suns out of star-dust whirled, To the one on the ache of a heart. 'Tis a novel — a romance — a mystery tale; And there's none but the Writer who knows How the wrong is to yield and the right to pre- vail, As the plot hurries on to the close. There are some who have read to the end of the book, But they never glanced upward to tell How the mystery ends, though their sweet, calm look Seems to warrant a hope that it ended well. Was it Finis they read on the ultimate page ? Was it Endeth the first book so — ? But ah! — they are silent; and poet and sage Must read to the end to know! 69 THE AWAKENING— AN IDYL OF SPRING Here in the forest wild, Silent the maiden lies, Sleep in her closed eyes, Lifeless, the forest-child. Folded in garments tvhite, Dreamless the maiden lies; Hush! — for all mysteries Sleep in her sleeping eyes. Passeth the night. Afar in the forest thrills The sound of a silver horn ; A quiver the silence fills, Like wind in a field of corn. Far distant, and sweet, and clear, It fades like a dream that dies; Unheeding, the maiden's ear — LTnlifted, her drooping eyes. Dawneth a pallid light, Here where the forest wild Watches her sleeping child. Passeth the night. But lo! — through the twilight rings Yet closer the silver horn; A flush in the east upsprings — A radiant hint of morn! "He cometh!" the cold wind sighs, That sweeps through the waning night; 70 "He cometh!" the darkness flies To hide from the face of light. He is come ! with the world aglow And dawn in the heavens red ; He is come! and the frost and snow Have vanished beneath his tread. Sleeping the maiden lies, Snoiv-wreaths enfolding her, While he, beholding her, Startled, ivith tender eyes, Kneels at her side; Breathes a soft word to her, Whispers, unheard, to her; Bends o'er her, sorrow-wild, Harks for her breath; Mourns the unreconciled Beauty and death. Then, at love's bidding wise, Soft on her sleeping eyes Kissing her, "Wake I" he cries, "Thou, O my bride!" Sing, O ye birds, how all joys with her waken! Burst, O ye buds, in a glory of birth ! Sweet let the bells of the lilies, wind-shaken, Ring the glad bridal of Springtime and Earth! Past is the sleep of the maid in the forest wild ; Gone is the snow from her slumbering breast; Over and done is the watch o'er the forest-child, Joy of her waking for peace of her rest! 7i Wind-flowers spring through their warm winter covering ; Violets hide in the grass at her feet; "Love!" sings the bluebird on azure wing hover- ing; Love is the gossip of breezes that meet. Haste, O ye birds to the groves you've forsaken! Sing, while buds burst in a passion of birth! Sing, for all mysteries with her awaken, Wake in the bridal of Springtime and Earth! 72 "FOR LO, THE WINTER IS PAST !" Ho — you who are tired with the learning You have pondered all winter in vain, Come out! let the spring winds returning Blow the cobwebs away from your brain! For books may be good in December, (Though the wiser man studies the snow) But only a fool would remember His books when hepaticas blow; When the high-holder's clarion is voicing His gladness that spring is reborn; When Echo repeats the rejoicing Of the meadow-lark's silvery horn. Have you squandered your birthright, O Broth- er? Here is life more abundant to live! Can the God who made sunlight do other Than bless and restore and forgive? Come out, you men who are weary! For the joy of the springtime is here; And the old, sad questions and dreary, Belong to the rest of the year. Here is peace in the quiver of grasses! By the smell of the leaves you are healed! And the love that all research o'erpasses, Has April declared and revealed! 73 "WHERE IT LISTETH" Oh hark ! 'tis the midnight wind : Now sad as a soul that has sinned, And rests not, night nor day, It hurries away — away — From some gray, ghastly fear That follows in its rear; Now hushed and soft and low, And lingering, wistful, slow, Through the harp-voiced pines it drifts, Where the silver moonlight sifts; Now off in a sudden change, Exultant and reckless and strange, And wild with a weird delight, It courses down the night And out and away o'er the fields, Where the young corn, bending, yields To the strength of the shouting blast ; Now rushing and hurrying past It flattens the leagues of wheat, Till they lie like a floor at its feet ; Now out on the sea it sweeps, Where the moonlit water sleeps, 74 And I see the quick flaws run, By the moon that is white as the sun. So it passes by and is gone, And the weary hours drag on, And the moon shines as before Across my chamber floor, As I turn to the silent gloom Of my spectre-haunted room, And the stillness so profound That it throbs in my ears like sound. From out the darkness sent, Again to the dark it went, And I never can hope to find The house of the ghostly wind. Only, on nights like these, I hear it in the trees, And try to solve — in vain — The riddle of its pain, Its rapture large and free, Its utter mystery. 75 WITH THE NIGHTFALL From grove and field the golden west recalls The last long sunbeams, and the shadow falls. A pewee whispers from the dusk of leaves ; In some far wood a mourning-dove yet grieves ; And through the quiet of the failing light, A lonely robin calls a clear good-night. Good-night — good-night! So wistful, strange and sweet, So with old dreams and memories replete, This hour of passing, when another day The twilight folds all silently away. Whence comes this sadness, dim and vague and vast — This echo of an unremembered past? This faint, far presage, as of future woes, That steals upon me as the daylight goes? I know not. But, O God, may it not be That then the mortal feels mortality — That through the dark the flesh-bound spirit yearns Toward that immortal which it half discerns? I know not. But I know I feel the power Of some strange, potent spell upon the hour — Some influence of sadness infinite, That shakes me in the robin's last good-night — Some longing, as the golden sunbeams die, That there is naught, on earth, to satisfy. 76 DIRGE FOR SUMMER "Summer's dead with all her roses, white and red!" Moan the bleak winds of November; "Summer's dead! "Bare is all her leafy woodland. Snow-flakes fall, "Where, serene and sweet, her thrushes used to call." "Summer's dead!" the fields unsightly seem to say; "Come, O snow, and hide our nakedness away!" "Summer's dead!" the winds are crying; "White and red "Were her roses — thev are dust, and she is dead !" MONOCHROME A harmony of melancholy grays: Gray earth, gray sky, gray meadow, hill and plain ; And in the heart gray thoughts of other days, Persistent as the gray November rain. Gray earth, gray rain, gray sky, gray distant lea ; Dead days come not again. Yet know, sad world, It is the close-wrapped buds of Junes to be, That with gray tears for Junes that were are pearled! 77 WHITE CLOVER O you clover, blooming clover, Where the dusty gold-wing sips, Do you wonder why I pluck you, Hold you close against my lips? Do you guess the reason, clover, For these bitter, bitter drops? Can a scorching rain be falling, When the sunshine never stops? Ah, you cannot know, my clover, How the sight and smell of you Brings the memories a-thronging Of a home that once I knew; With the clover in the orchard, And the humming honey-bees, And the wren's light-hearted singing In the rosy apple-trees; With the love that bent above me, As the sunny heavens bend; — O you foolish, sweet, white clover, You can never comprehend! 78 A ROSE FROM HOME No more for me red Jacqueminots, Nor sweet La France, with pink leaves curled; But I will keep this wee white rose, That came to me across the world. Across the world — ah little rose! By mountain pass and dusty plain, You came to say : "The vine still grows, "And waits for you to come again. "And now the summer dreams o'er all ; "The last fair, creamy buds unclose, "And silken petals fluttering fall "In every gentle wind that blows; "And June is sweet at home today — " Ah, but my heart already knows The whole of what you come to say, You little, white, Ohio rose! 79 THE BROOK "Hush— oh hush!" The brooklet sings, Murmuring through the long green grasses; And each laughing ripple tosses O'er the dripping velvet mosses Sunlit diamonds as it passes. "Hush— ah hush!" My brooklet sings. "Hush— oh hush!" My brooklet sings; And the grasses droop to listen; And the waving fern leaves, bending, Hark the murmur never-ending, Of the waves that glint and glisten. "Hush— ah hush!" The brooklet sings. "Hush— oh hush!" The brooklet sings, With such sweet, persistent chiding, That, all worldly noise unheeding, I obey its tender pleading, Lie and dream, while, softly gliding, "Hush— ah hush!" My brooklet sings. 80 A PRAYER Thou, O Father, thought it best From my ken to take Thy light; Left me lying, without rest, Staring, wide-eyed, into night. By the lonely gloom of doubt I am frightened, like a child When the lamp is carried out And he cries, unreconciled, Till his soothing mother steals To his side and comfort brings, While across the dark he feels For her hand and to it clings. So I, Father, cry to Thee! I ask not to understand — Take the lamp; but come to me Through the dark and hold my hand. 81 EASTER LILIES I rose, and took my sorrow Unto God's house to-day ; I knelt below the chancel And tried to weep or pray. Above me, round about me, The organ's triumph rang; And "Risen — He is risen!" A thousand voices sang. As in a dream I heard them; I saw, as in a dream, Red lights across the chancel From painted windows stream. And then at last was silence, And all were gone away; But still in the cathedral I knelt and tried to pray. Was there no comfort for me? No answer anywhere? No sign a God was with me, To save me from despair? No sign? — mine eyes were lifted! I saw them, pure and pale — The holy Easter lilies, Behind the altar-rail. O ranks of Easter lilies! O lilies tall and white, Faint-touched from chancel windows With gleams of crimson light ! — 82 Beyond all priestly wisdom The silence of your speech! Your beauty helped the heart-ache That music could not reach ! Then doubt and bitter anguish A moment drew away; My tears shut out the lilies At last, and I could pray. "HE GIVETH SNOW" All day the dreary, wintry rain came down From sullen skies to meadows sodden, brown; And all day long the cold rain, merciless, Beat on the shrinking forest's nakedness. Till, with the evening, came from storm surcease, As if a voice had spoken, saying, "Peace!" And straight the rain stopped, and the healing snow Began to fall in great flakes white and slow. And then the sad wind ceased its weary sound Through dead leaves still to lifeless branches bound; And o'er the trees a solemn quiet crept, As if the Mother soothed them and they slept. All day upon my soul fierce passion's blast Fell pitiless; gray sin-clouds overcast My rain-dark sky; till with the evening — lo! There fell a great white peace, like healing snow. 83 NOT HIS THE SILENCE O you whose doubt I know, whose pain I share! Who cry into the night if God be there, And wait, and listen, till the silence seems As empty and as meaningless as dreams! Across my soul-dark shines a ray of light — A silver star upon the void of night. If there be comfort in it, take the thought: Through countless years an unknown worker wrought, Till lo ! we see the sunrise — hear the wind — Behold Creation — guess the God behind! Long ages more the Laborer will need To give us soul-eyes, that we see indeed; Long ages more, before our dullard ears Shall catch the music of the quiring spheres. Be still, O crying souls ! I think He hears The bitter falling of our midnight tears ; Yearns pitiful above the infant, Man; Awaits the patient progress of His plan Within the soul that now in anguish cowers ; — Not His the silence, but the deafness ours! 84 EASTER Oh come, you weary-hearted! Put by your grief an hour! For see! along the highroad The maples are in flower. The willows are unsheathing Their catkins' velvet gray ; The lilac buds are swelling; The air is soft as May. From out the brown mold springing, The crocus lifts her head; Lo! — all things fair and lovely Are rising from the dead. Of love the bluebird warbles ; Of faith the sparrow sings; And through the robin's joyance The hope of Easter rings. Come out, you weary-hearted! Lay down your winter fears ! Here wait the winds of April To dry your winter tears! 85 THE WILD ROSE The day was fair as a day can be, And the wind blew fresh from a joyous sea, When he gathered a rose for her hand to hold, A wild pink rose with a heart of gold. Ah me — the rose! And lest a thorn her hand should tear, He plucked them away with a laughing care: "O Love! my love shall as thornless be "As the wild sweet rose that I give to thee, "The sweet wild rose with the heart of gold!" Ah me — his love! The shadows fell that day by the sea, And the wind blew soft and gloomily; And she had no words when he kissed her there, A careless kiss on her red-gold hair; And she had no words when he said good-bye, Though the whole of her heart was an aching cry — The desolate cry of a love untold For the poor, light lover she could not hold. Ah me — her love! The shadows fell on the joyous sea, And the dying wind blew mournfully, While the night in lonely darkness spread, And the cold stars shining overhead Looked down on the sweet rose lying dead; (Poor thornless rose, with your heart of gold!) And her hands were whole — but the thorns in- stead Had torn her heart till it ached and bled. Ah me — the thorns! 86 THE DEATH OF THE WIND Oh I was the Wind last night ! And I rode a sailless sea, In the wildest delight, While the moon was white, And the mermaidens frolicked with me ! Oh I was the Wind last night ! And across the land I fled, Like a sorrowing soul With a secret dole And a voice that was hollow with dread. Oh I was the Wind last night, Till I found your garden, Sweet! Then I swooned to a breeze Through your lilac-trees, And I died of my love at your feet. 87 A MIDSUMMER LAMENT The pebbly bed of the brook is dry, Where we used to wander, Dear! And the sun shines white in the blazing sky, And the ferns all brown and withering lie, In the hot noon of the year. I stroll in our old ravine alone, But the woods are sadly still, For I miss the brook's low undertone, As it rippled and laughed over root and stone, And I miss your voice's thrill. In the spring, when the banks of the little stream Overflowed, like our hearts with love, Through the tiny leaves fell the sunlight's gleam, And the world was clad in a golden dream, With the sky of hope above. And the dragon-fly — you remember, I know, How he hovered on frail blue wing Where the loving alders bent more low, And the brook half paused, ran still and slow, And the shy birds came to sing; — The dragon-fly came back to-day As if he remembered too; But the place was changed, and he would not stay, But veered on a sudden and darted away, For he missed the brook and you. 88 A NOCTURNE From the midnight sky the starlight, Lingering, through her window creeps; O'er her dreaming Faintly streaming Benedictions while she sleeps. From the garden to her lattice, From a hundred flowers arise Odors stealing And revealing Hidden sweet that in them lies. Never sound of voice or music On the sacred stillness breaks; Night the holy Watches solely — Watches silent, till she wakes. 89 HE DOES NOT KNOW On the warm brown sand of the beach they sit; The tall grass shades them, as, whispering low, It bends to the breeze that is saying to it, "He does not know — he does not know!" The lake lies calm in the glad sunlight, And the waves that ripple and ebb and flow, Call — call, till they fill her soul with fright Lesthe hear their calling, "He does not know!" He does not know! and the sweet hours glide Down the pitiless west where all sweet hours go; And the hope that was born at the dawn has died, And the night has come — and he does not know. 90 A MEMORY OF JUNE Here under the shade of the orchard trees I am fanned by the breath of each wandering breeze, And, rocked in my hammock, I sway to and fro, While the wind whispers lullabies, softly and low. I close my eyes, and I hear once more The ripples that break on a pebbly shore; The hammock sways — and again I float With you, dear heart, in a winged boat ; And the blue of the wave and the blue of the skies, Shines back to me from your soulful eyes. O days of June, when we sailed away From the cares and the pains of the every-day — We have left you behind, like the bubbles afloat In the wake that was left by our winged boat ! 91 AN HUMBLE VALENTINE In olden times, when ladies fair Were wont to drive men to despair, And rivaled with their own bright eyes All tricks Dan Cupid could devise; All loving swains, upon this day, In dainty verse and love-lorn lay Were wont to voice their sad complaint And beg the aid of our good Saint. In modern times, alas! though I May vainly bite my pen and try To find some new and witty word To tell the tale you've often heard, I cannot find a single rhyme That's not been used full many a time ; And all the endearing terms I'd pour Have served the purpose oft before. But, lady, though your lover's plea May want originality, Scorn not, for that, the faithful heart That lacks, not loyalty, but art. Go search the good Saint's archives through, And think each love note's writ to you; Then know, they cannot half express My ardour or your loveliness! 92 IN THE RAIN In the edge of the wood she was standing — I saw her quite plain; There was nothing between but the misty gray curtain of rain, When I saw her, my dryad, whose face I shall ever remember, Though seeing it never again. In the edge of the wood she was standing; One hand, lily-white, On the bole of a hoary old beech laid a pressure as light As the touch of a snow-flake adrift on a night of December; So paused she a space in her flight. In the edge of the wood she was standing; She smiled at me there, And I saw that her eyes were sea-blue 'neath the wind-driven hair, And I saw while she lingered, — alas, I shall ever remember — She more than a mortal was fair. In the edge of the wood she was standing, Her garments wind-blown; And I heard through the rain a low music, half laugh and half moan, And she held out her arms ere she vanished, — that much I remember! I stood in the rain, all alone. 93 TO A DRAGON-FLY O dragon-fly! — you fragile-winged And restless creature of the air! How like you are to happiness — As changeful and as fair! Upon yon water-lily leaf, Where silver globes like tear-drops run, You light to rest, your azure wings A-glitter in the sun, For one sweet instant; then away To greener fields and pastures new! While all day long the lonely leaf Must dream and dream of you; Until, perchance, with filmy wings Stained crimson by the sunset light, You wander back at eventide, In aimless, zigzag flight, To dart — to hover — and to veer! To light on that glad leaf again, That patient waits, as we must wait, Her chance of joy or pain! 94 A FAREWELL The Day, departing, with reluctant feet Steals slowly o'er the rustling grasses sweet; And Twilight, dusky harbinger of Night, Down dew-wet valleys comes with footsteps light. Among the whispering leaves the night breeze sighs ; Far on yon mist-wreathed hills the rose light dies; The tide creeps murmuring o'er the darkening shore, And thou — sweet Day! — art gone, forevermore. No more, O Day of days, shalt thou be born In all the ruddy splendor of thy morn ; No more shall every bird its carol raise To welcome thee, O thou sweet Day of days! No more shalt thou thy kindly noon-light throw Upon the joyous summer fields below; The waves creep, sobbing, o'er the lonely shore, And thou art gone — art gone forevermore. Though other days, as fair as thou, should rise From out the radiant clouds of eastern skies, And fairy hours, with mellow laughter sweet, Dance other days away with steps as fleet; Yet something, with thy last, faint, waning light, Thou'st borne from me into eternal night. The sad waves sigh upon the silent shore, And thou, sweet Day — farewell, forevermore ! 95 GREAT SALT LAKE So still it lies, it seems a pictured dream, Left over from an unremembered past; On it no flying clouds their shadows cast, Nor ripple stirs, nor hov'ring sea-fowl scream. More blue it is than is the azure sky That bends above its smooth, unheaving breast; And far across its waters, to the west, Dim purple hills along the distance lie. Still as the world was ere it felt God's breath; Mid salt gray deserts far as eye can see, It sleeps in utter, lifeless mystery, As strange and bright and wonderful as death. 96 FROM THE DARK Awake for me out of the darkness, ivory keys! For lo ! — I have stolen away from the laughter and light; I have come to you, seeking the charm that my fettered soul frees, And lifts from my spirit the burden of silence and night. Oh speak to me tenderly, little ones! soothe into rest All the clamorous thoughts of the day that is over and done, Till they sink into quiet as gently as sinks in the west, Into healing sweet comfort of darkness, the road-weary sun. Now the twilight of revery folds me about, and the sky Grows darker and deep with the hope of the still, white stars; And the lights of the town, stealing up to my choir-loft, lie On the gray dusk above me in golden, tremu- lous bars. I am lifted away from the glare of the quivering street, Where the night is repeating the wearisome round of the day ; The clanging of bells and the sound of the pass- ing of feet, To a mellow, half musical monotone dwindles away. 97 It is peace that I seek, all the day's fret and fever to heal. How cool, little brothers, your touch in the evenlight seems! I have fled in a weary revolt from the things that are real, From the desolate ocean of truth to the haven of dreams. Ah hush, speak soft! Do you hear it? — the swell of the wind That is sweeping the dark of the myriad, mur- muring leaves? Do you hear their low laugh, as they lean to each other to find If any's so fond that his vagabond tales she be- lieves? How strong and untroubled and steadfast the aged trees rise, And the peace of the unheeded centuries sil- ently hold! There are odors abroad in the forest : mysterious sighs From the bursting of buds, and the fresh, leafy smell of the mold; And, poignantly sweet, is the breath of acacia flowers Now passing — now passed, on the wings of a hurrying breeze; Spring noises arise from the dusk of the deep ferny bowers, Then still them again in the harkening hush of the trees. 98 Oh let me creep closer, great Mother! The spell of your rest Is upon me, my eyelids are heavy and droop- ing with sleep, And I fain would lie down all the night on your soft-heaving breast, Half hearing, half feeling, through slumber too sweet to be deep, How the slow, solemn hours of the night through the forest ways go, And the stars journey on down the infinite vast of the skies, And, swaying my vine-woven curtains, the night winds blow, And the darkness, like gentle, cool hands, on my tired brow lies. Then — silence. The music grows faint, and my forest dream ends With my fingers at rest on the keys in the soft- folding gloom; And the steps ever pass and repass, and the street glare ascends In a tremulous glimmer of gold through the dusk of the room. Through the dark still acquiver with visions, my pulses beat fast At the thrill of your passionate yielding, O keys, to my need; But the pitiful sound of the poor, tired feet going past, Cries up an eternal sad question — a riddle to read. 99 Why is it, O sweet my consolers, that it is for me Your secrets are kept with their potent and tender release? Are they longing less bitterly, down in the street, to be free Than I, who above in my choir-loft overtake peace? Am I favored of God o'er my fellows? Are they to stay blind While for me are glad visions — while I speak, are they to be dumb? Shall I joy then in this my preferment, say God is so kind That he gives me permission to enter where all may not come? Cry — cry out against it, strong voices ! Prefer- ment were shame Were this the whole truth of the riddle; far better to sink To a level of common endurance: to halt with the lame, With the blind to be blind, with the dreary my sorrow-dregs drink. Were this the whole truth of the riddle! — ah mas- terful keys, How you sweep to a solemn crescendo of tri- umph and might! Till the darkness of doubting is pierced, and my rapt soul sees That the throng of the still white stars in the sky is alight. ioo And the riddle reads thus: my preferment nor shame is nor crown. I am favored not over my fellows, except that from this, The uplift of my passion-sweet dreams, I may better look down And see all of life in its fulness of heart-break and bliss; Till wisdom shall grow out of wonder, and love out of pain, And a nobler unrest in the place of my rest- lessness spring; Till I know, O my keys, that I seek for your sol- ace in vain, If only the wounds in myself to your healing I bring. I must grieve with the grief of all men, with their weariness droop; I must carry their sins with my own at the times when I pass Down the dim, hushed aisles of the dream- groves, where I may stoop And bury their burdens with mine in the flow- er-sown grass. Oh terrible joy of expression! to lift in one's hands All the weight of world-anguish, to feel its keen stir in the breast; To voice the least part of the yearning of ages that stands As the sign of Man's striving from good unto better and best! IOI Lie quiet, O keys, in the dusk, while the echoes that start Into tender vibrations, the silence reluctantly stills. I go down to the light and the laughter with peace in my heart, Like children,, with hands full of wind-flow- ers, back from the hills. I02 Come forth to the fields! where a better book lies Wide open forever to him that hath eyes: A book that contains all that's sacred and true; A book that is old but eternally new; A book in whose pages no problem you'll find Sai'e the problem of Life and the God that's be- hind; A book in whose lines are all things fresh and fair — The crystalline waters, the bird-haunted air, The stars of the sky and the roses of June, The lilt of the morning, the hush of the noon, The thunderous waves of the rock-girdled seas, The drifting of clouds and the tossing of trees; All these — all these — Are written large in the book I love best, That I seek again as the bird its nest When my brain is tired and my heart grows cold Toward our pitiful books that are bought and sold! For the books of the day may be sound and sweet; In the midst of the tares there is much that is wheat; But the Book of All Time, in the sky and the sod Was written — by none but the lingers of God! 103 $9 *•: LA.. PK?^R Marian Warner Wildman