By Madison Julius Cawein
Part IV
Late Autumn They who die young are blest. - Should we not envy such? They are Earth's happiest, God-loved and favored much! - They who die young are blest.1Sick and sad, propped among pillows, she sits at her window.'Though the dog-tooth violet comeWith April showers,And the wild-bees' music humAbout the flowers,We shall never wend as whenLove laughed leading us from menOver violet vale and glen,Where the bob-white piped for hours,And we heard the rain-crow's drum.Now November heavens are gray;Autumn killsEvery joy - like leaves of MayIn the rills. -Still I sit and lean and listenTo a voice that has arisenIn my heart - with eyes that glistenLooking at the happy hillsFading dark-blue far away.2She gazes out upon the dying garden.There rank death clutches at the flowersAnd drags them down and stamps in earth.At morn the thin, malignant hours,Shrill-mouthed among the windy bowers,Clamor a bitter mirth. -Or is it heart-break that, forlorn,Would so conceal itself in scorn?At noon the weak, white sunlight crawls,Like feeble feet once beautiful,From mildewed walks to mildewed walls,Down which the oozing moisture fallsUpon the cold toadstool. -Faint on the leaves it drips and creeps -Or is it tears of one who weeps?At night a misty blur of moonSlips through the trees, - pale as a faceOf melancholy marble hewn; -And, like the phantom of some tune,Winds whisper in the place. -Or is it love come back again,Seeking its perished joy in vain?3She muses upon the past.When in her cloudy chiton,Spring freed the frozen rills,And walked in rainbowed light onThe forests, fields, and hills;Beyond the world's horizon,That no such glory lies on,And no such hues bedizen,Love led us far from ills.When Summer came, a sickleStuck in her sheaf of gleams,And let the honey trickleFrom out the beehives' seams;Within the violet-blottedSweet book to us alloted, -Whose lines are starry dotted, -Love read us still his dreams.Then Autumn came, - a liar,A fair-faced heretic; -In gypsy garb of fire,Throned on a harvest rick. -Our lives, that fate had thwarted,Stood pale and broken hearted, -Though smiling when we parted, -Where love to death lay sick.Now is the Winter waited,The tyrant hoar and old,With death and hunger mated,Who counts his crimes like gold. -Once more before foreverWe part - once more, then never -Once more before we severMust I his face behold!4She takes up a book and reads.What little things are those That hold our happiness!A smile, a glance, a rose Dropped from her hair or dress;A word, a look, a touch, - These are so much, so much.An air we can't forget; A sunset's gold that gleams;A spray of migonette, Will fill the soul with dreamsMore than all history says, Or romance of old days.For of the human heart, Not brain, is memory;These things it makes a part Of its own entity;The joys, the pains whereof Are the very food of love.5She lays down the book.How true! how true! - but words are weak In sympathy they give the soul,To music - music, that can speak All the heart's pain and dole;Still making us remember mostThe love we've lost, the love we've lost.So weary am I, and so fain To see his face, to feel his kissThrill rapture through my soul again, There is no hell like this. -Ah, God! my God, were it not bestTo give me rest, to give me rest?6She writes to him to come to her.Dead lie the dreams we cherished, The dreams we loved so well;Like forest leaves they perished, Like autumn leaves they fell.Alas! that dreams so soon should pass!Alas! Alas!The stream lies bleak and arid That once went singing on;The flowers once that varied Its banks are dead and gone:Where these were once are thorns and thirst -The place is curst.Come to me; I am lonely: Forgive what you have heard. -Come to me; if for only One last sad parting word:For one last word before the pallFalls over all.The day and hour are suited For what I'd say to youOf love that I uprooted - But I have suffered too!Come to me; I would say good-byBefore I die.7The wind rises; the trees are agitated.Woods, that beat the wind with frantic Gestures and drop darkly 'roundAcorns gnarled and leaves that antic Wildly on the rustling ground!Is it tragic grief that saddens Through your souls this autumn day?Or the joy of death that gladdens In exultance of decay?Arrogant you lift defiant Boughs against the moaning blast,That, like some invisible giant, Wrapped in tumult, thunders past.Is it that in such insurgent Fury tossed from tree to tree,You would quench the fiercely urgent Pangs of some old memory?As in toil and violent action, That still help them to forget,Mortals drown the dark distraction And insistence of regret.8She muses in the gathering twilight.Last night I slept till midnight; then woke, and far awayA cock crowed; lonely and distant came mournful a watch-dog's bay:But lonelier, sadder the tedious, old clock ticked on towards day.And what a day! - remember those morns of summer and spring,That bound our lives together! each morn a wedding-ringOf dew, aroma and sparkle, and flowers and birds a-wing.Sweet morns when I strolled my garden awaiting him, the roseExpected too, with blushes - the Giant-of-Battle that growsA bank of radiance and fragrance where the gate its shadow throws.Not in vain did I wait, departed summer, amid your phlox!The powdery crystal and crimson of your hollow hollyhocks;Your fairy-bells and poppies and the bee that in them rocks.Cool-clad 'neath the pendulous purple of the morning-glory vine,By the jewel-mine of the pansies and the snapdragons in line,I waited, and there he met me whose heart was one with mine.How warm was the breath of the garden when he met me there that day!How the burnished beetle and butterfly flew past us, each a ray! -The memory of those meetings still bears me far away.Ah, me! when I think of the handfuls of little gold coins a-massMy bachelor's-buttons scattered over the garden grass,And the marigolds that boasted their bits of burning brass;More bitter I feel the autumn tighten 'round spirit and heart;And regret the days remembered as lost - that stand apart,A chapter holy and sacred, I read with eyes that smart.Again to the woods a-trysting by the watermill I steal,Where the lilies tumble together, the madcap wind at heel;And meet him among the blossoms that the rocks and the trees conceal.Or the wild-cat grey of the meadows that the ox-eyed daisies dot;Fawn-eyed and tiger-yellow, that tangle a tawny spotOf languid leopard beauty that dozes fierce and hot....Ah! back again with the present! with winds that pinch and twistThe leaves in their peevish passion, and whirl wherever they list;With the autumn, hoary and nipping, whose mausolean mistBuilds wan a tomb for the daylight; - each morning shaggy with fog,That fits grey wigs to the cedars, and furs with frost each log;That carpets with pearl the meadow, and marbles brook and bog, -Alone at dawn - indifferent: alone at eve - I sigh:And wait, like the wind complaining: complain and know not why:But ailing and longing and pining because I do not die.How dull is that sunset! dreary and cold, and hard and dead!The ghost of the one last August that, deeply rich and red,Like the wine of God's own vintage, poured purple overhead.But now I sit with the sighing dead dreams of a dying year;Like the fallen leaves and the acorns, am worthless and feel as sear,With a withered soul and body whose heart is one big tear.As I stare from my window the daylight, like a bravo, its cloak puts on.The moon, like a cautious lanthorn, glitters and then is gone. -Will he come to-night? will he answer? - Oh, God! would it were dawn!9He enters. Taking her in his arms he speaks.They said you were dying - You shall not die!...Why are you crying? Why do you sigh? -Cease that sad sighing! - Love, it is I.All is forgiven! - Love is not poor;Though he was driven Once from your door,Back he has striven, To part nevermore!Will you remember What I forget? -Words, each an ember, That you regret?Now in November, Now we have met?What if love wept once! What though you knew!What if he crept once Pleading to you! -He never slept once, Nor was untrue.Often forgetful, Love may forget;Froward and fretful, Dear, he will fret;Ever regretful, He will regret.Life is completer Through his control;Living made sweeter Even through dole,Hearing Love's metre Sing in the soul.Flesh may not hear it, Being impure;And mind may fear it, May not endure;But in the spirit - There we are sure.So when to-morrow Ceases, and weQuit this we borrow, Mortality,Love chastens sorrow So it can see....Still you are weeping! Why do you weep? -Are tears in keeping With joy so deep?Gladness so sweeping? - Are you asleep?Speak to me, dearest! Say it is true! -That I am nearest, Dearest to you. -Smile with those clearest Eyes of grey blue.10She smiles through her tears; holding his hands she speaks.They did not say I could not live beyond this weary night,But now I know that I shall die before the morning's light.How weak I am! - but you'll forgive me when I tell you howI loved you - love you; and the pain it is to leave you now?We could not marry! - See, the flesh, that clothes the soul of me,Ordained at birth a sacrifice to this heredity,Denied, forbade. - Ah, you have seen the bright spots in my cheeksFlush hectic, as before the night the west burns blood-red streaks?Consumption. - "But I promised you my hand"? - a thing forlornOf life; diseased! - Oh, God! - and so, far better so, forsworn! -Oh, I was jealous of your love. But think: if I had diedEre babe of mine had come to be a solace at your side!Had it been little then - your grief, when Heaven had made us oneIn everything that's good on earth and then the good undone?No! no! and had I had a child, what grief and agonyTo know that blight born in him, too, against all help of me!Just when we cherish him the most, and youthful, sunny prideSits on his curly front, to see him die ere we have died. -Whose fault? - Ah, God! - not mine! but his, that ancestor who gaveEscutcheon to our humble house - a Death's-head and a Grave.Beneath the pomp of those grim arms I live and may not move;Nor faith, nor truth, nor wealth avail to hurl them down, nor love!How could I tell you this? - not then! when all the world was spunOf morning colors for our love to walk and dance upon.I could not tell you how disease hid here a hideous germ,Precedence slowly claiming and so slowly fixing firm.And when I broke our plighted troth and would not tell you why,I loved you, thinking, "time enough when I have come to die."Draw off my rings, and let my hands rest so ... the wretched coughWill interrupt my feeble speech and will not be put off....Ah, anyhow my anodyne is this - to know that youAre near me, love me! - Kiss me now, as you were wont to do.And tell me you forgive me all; and say you will forgetThe sorrow of that breaking-off, the fever and the fret. -Now set those roses near my face and tell me death's a lie -Once it was hard for me to live ... now it is hard to die.The Marionettes ByWalter De La Mare Let the foul Scene proceed:There's laughter in the wings;'Tis sawdust that they bleed,But a box Death brings.How rare a skill is theirsThese extreme pangs to show,How real a frenzy wearsEach feigner of woe!Gigantic dins uprise!Even the gods must feelA smarting of the eyesAs these fumes upsweal.Strange, such a Piece is free,While we Spectators sit,Aghast at its agony,Yet absorbed in it!Dark is the outer air,Cold the night
Tune - "Bonnie wee thing."I.Bonnie wee thing, cannie wee thing,Lovely wee thing, wert thou mine,I wad wear thee in my bosom,Lest my jewel I should tine.Wishfully I look and languishIn that bonnie face o' thine;And my heart it stounds wi' anguish,Lest my wee thing be na mine.II.Wit, and grace, and love, and beauty&n
When the drums begin to beatDown the street,When the poles are fetched and guyed,When the tight-rope's stretched and tied,When the dance-girls make salaam,When the snake-bag wakes alarm,When the pipes set up their drone,When the sharp-edged knives are thrownWhen the red-hot coals are shown,To be swallowed by-and-by,Arre, Brethren, here come I!Stripped to loin-cloth in the sun,Search me well and watch me close!Tell me how my tricks are done,Tell me how the mango grows!Give a man who is not madeTo his tradeSwords to fling and catch again,Coins to ring and snatch again,Men to harm and cure again,Snakes to charm and lure again,He'll be hurt by his own blade,By his serpents disobeyed,By his clumsiness bewrayed,By the people laughed to scorn,So 'tis not with juggler born! Pinch of dust or withered flower,Chance-flung nut or borrowed staff,Serve his need and shore
As those of old drank mummiaTo fire their limbs of lead,Making dead kings from AfricaStand pandar to their bed;Drunk on the dead, and medicinedWith spiced imperial dust,In a short night they reeled to findTen centuries of lust.So I, from paint, stone, tale, and rhyme,Stuffed love's infinity,And sucked all lovers of all timeTo rarify ecstasy.Helen's the hair shuts out from meVerona's livid skies;Gypsy the lips I press; and seeTwo Antonys in your eyes.The unheard invisible
Vast was the wealth I carried in life's pack - Youth, health, ambition, hope and trust; but Time And Fate, those robbers fit for any crime,Stole all, and left me but the empty sack.Before me lay a long and lonely track Of darkling hills and barren steeps to climb; Behind me lay in shadows the sublimeLost lands of Love's delight.Alack!Alack!Unwearied, and with springing steps elate, I had conveyed my wealth along the road. The empty sack proved now a heavier load:&n
Coming, clean from the Maryland-endOf this great National Road of ours,Through your vast West; with the time to spend,Stopping for days in the main towns, whereEvery citizen seemed a friend,And friends grew thick as the wayside flowers, -I found no thing that I might narrateMore singularly strange or queerThan a thing I found in your sister-stateOhio, - at a river-town - down hereIn my notebook:Zanesville - situateOn the stream Muskingum - broad and clear,And navigable, through half the year,North, to Coshocton; south, as farAs Marietta.- But these f
He seemed so strange to me, every way -In manner, and form, and size,From the boy I knew but yesterday, -I could hardly believe my eyes!To hear his name called over there,My memory thrilled with gleeAnd leaped to picture him young and fairIn youth, as he used to be.But looking, only as glad eyes can,For the boy I knew of yore,&nb
Ah, fair Lord God of Heaven, to whom we call, - By whom we live, - on whom our hopes are built, - Do Thou, from year to year, e'en as Thou wilt,Control the Realm, but suffer not to fallIts ancient faith, its grandeur, and its thrall! Do Thou preserve it, in the hours of guilt, When foemen thirst for blood that should be spilt,And keep it strong when traitors would appal.Uphold us still, O God! and be the screen And sword and buckler of our England's might, 
The Marionettes ByWalter De La Mare Let the foul Scene proceed:There's laughter in the wings;'Tis sawdust that they bleed,But a box Death brings.How rare a skill is theirsThese extreme pangs to show,How real a frenzy wearsEach feigner of woe!Gigantic dins uprise!Even the gods must feelA smarting of the eyesAs these fumes upsweal.Strange, such a Piece is free,While we Spectators sit,Aghast at its agony,Yet absorbed in it!Dark is the outer air,Cold the night
By Madison Julius CaweinPart IVLate AutumnThey who die young are blest. -Should we not envy such? They are Earth's happiest,God-loved and favored much! - They who die young are blest.1Sick and sad, propped among pillows, she sits at her window.'Though the dog-tooth violet comeWith April showers,And the wild-bees' music humAbout the flowers,We shall never wend as whenLove laughed leading us from menOver violet vale and glen,Where the bob-white piped for hours,And we heard the rain-crow's drum.Now November heavens are gray;Autumn killsEvery joy - like leaves of MayIn the rills. -Still I sit
Now while so many turn with love and longingTo wan lands lying in the grey North Sea,To thee we turn, hearts, mem�ries, all belonging,Dear land of ours, to thee.West, ever west, with the strong sunshine marchingBeyond the mountains, far from this soft coast,Until we almost see the great plains arching,In endless mirage lost.A land of camps where seldom is sojourning,Where men like the dim fathers of our raceHalt for a time, and next day, unreturning,Fare ever on apace.Last night how many a leaping blaze affrightedThe wailing birds of passage in their file:&nb
George FullerHaunted of Beauty, like the marvellous youthWho sang Saint Agnes' Eve! How passing fairHer shapes took color in thy homestead air!How on thy canvas even her dreams were truth!Magician! who from commonest elementsCalled up divine ideals, clothed uponBy mystic lights soft blending into oneWomanly grace and child-like innocence.Teacher I thy lesson was not given in vain.Beauty is goodness; ugliness is sin;Art's place is sacred: nothing foul thereinMay crawl or tread with bestial feet profane.If rightly choosing is the painter's test,Thy
Love, like a beggar, came to meWith hose and doublet torn:His shirt bedangling from his knee,With hat and shoes outworn.He ask'd an alms; I gave him bread,And meat too, for his need:Of which, when he had fully fed,He wished me all good speed.Away he went, but as he turn'd(In faith I know not how)He touch'd me so, as that I burn['d],And am tormented now.Love's silent flames and fires obscureThen crept into my heart;And though I saw no bow, I'm sureHis finger was the dart.ByRobert Herric
I'll tell thee everything I can:There's little to relate.I saw an aged aged man,A-sitting on a gate.'Who are you, aged man?' I said.'And how is it you live?'And his answer trickled through my head,Like water through a sieve.He said, 'I look for butterfliesThat sleep among the wheat:I make them into mutton-pies,And sell them in the street.I sell them unto men,' he said,'Who sail on stormy seas;And that's the way I get my bread,A trifle, if you please.'But I was thinking of a planTo dye one's whiskers green,And always use so large a fanThat they could not be seen.So having no reply to giveTo what the old man said, I cried'Come, tell me how you live!'And thumped him on the head.His accents mild took up the tale:He said 'I go my ways,And when I find a mountain-rill,I set it in a blaze;
Climbing the heights of BerkeleyNightly I watch the West.There lies new San Francisco,Sea-maid in purple dressed,Wearing a dancer's girdleAll to inflame desire:Scorning her days of sackcloth,Scorning her cleansing fire.See, like a burning citySets now the red sun's dome.See, mystic firebrands sparkleThere on each store and home.See how
O Sorrow, cruel fellowship,O Priestess in the vaults of Death,O sweet and bitter in a breath,What whispers from thy lying lip?"The stars," she whispers, "blindly run;A web is wov'n across the sky;From out waste places comes a cry,And murmurs from the dying sun:"And all the phantom, Nature, stands--With all the music in her tone,A hollow echo of my own,--A hollow form with empty hands."And shall I take a thing so blind,Embrace her as my natural good;Or crush her, like a vice of blood,Upon the threshold of the mind?ByAlfred Lord Tennysonhttps://www.public-domain-poetry.com/alfred-lord-tennyson/in-memoriam-3-o-sorrow-cruel-fellowship-743
Some one came knockingAt my wee, small door;Some one came knocking,I'm sure - sure - sure;I listened, I opened,I looked to left and right,But naught there was a-stirringIn the still dark night;Only the busy beetleTap-tapping in the wall,Only from the forestThe screech-owl's call,Only the cricket whistlingWhile the dewdrops fall,So I know not who came knocking,At all, at all, a