Part 8 (1/2)
Vision
The wintry sun was pale On hill and hedge; The wind smote with its flail The seeded sedge; High up above the world, New taught to fly, The withered leaves were hurled About the sky; And there, through death and dearth, It went and came,-- The Glory of the earth That hath no name.
I know not what it is; I only know It quivers in the bliss Where roses blow, That on the winter's breath It broods in s.p.a.ce, And o'er the face of death I see its face, And start and stand between Delight and dole, As though mine eyes had seen A living Soul.
And I have followed it, As thou hast done, Where April shadows flit Beneath the sun; In dawn and dusk and star, In joy and fear, Have seen its glory far And felt it near, And dared recall his name Who stood unshod Before a fireless flame, And called it G.o.d.
September
I have not been among the woods, Nor seen the milk-weeds burst their hoods,
The downy thistle-seeds take wing, Nor the squirrel at his garnering.
And yet I know that, up to G.o.d, The mute month holds her goldenrod,
That clump and copse, o'errun with vines, Twinkle with cl.u.s.tered muscadines,
And in deserted churchyard places Dwarf apples smile with sunburnt faces.
I know how, ere her green is shed, The dogwood pranks herself with red;
How the pale dawn, chilled through and through, Comes drenched and draggled with her dew;
How all day long the sunlight seems As if it lit a land of dreams,
Till evening, with her mist and cloud, Begins to weave her royal shroud.
If yet, as in old Homer's land, G.o.ds walk with mortals, hand in hand,
Somewhere to-day, in this sweet weather, Thinkest thou not they walk together?
Barefooted
The girls all like to see the bluets in the lane And the saucy johnny-jump-ups in the meadow, But, we boys, we want to see the dogwood blooms again, Throwin' a sort of summer-lookin' shadow; For the very first mild mornin' when the woods are white (And we needn't even ask a soul about it) We leave our shoes right where we pulled them off at night, And, barefooted once again, we run and shout it: You may take the country over-- When the bluebird turns a rover, And the wind is soft and hazy, And you feel a little lazy, And the hunters quit the possums-- It's the time for dogwood blossoms.
We feel so light we wish there were more fences here; We'd like to jump and jump them, all together!
No sleds for us, no guns, nor even 'simmon beer, No nothin' but the blossoms and fair weather!
The meadow is a little sticky right at first, But a few short days 'll wipe away that trouble.