Part 9 (1/2)
JOHN RUSSELL HAYES
THE GARDEN IN AUGUST
From corn-crib by the level pasture-lands To knoll where spruce and boulders hide the road I know it like a book, and when my heart Is waste and dry and hard and choked with weeds, I come here till it gently blooms again.
For gardens yield rich fruits that will outlast The autumn and the winter of the soul, Richest to him who toils with loving hands.
'Tis delving thus we learn life's secrets told But to those favored few who dig for them.
The Garden is an intimate and keeps In touch with us, yet hath its own high moods, And doth impose them on the mind of man To shame his pettiness. So do I love Its s.h.i.+mmering August mood keyed to the sun, A harlequin of color, birds and bloom.
Nasturtiums, zinnias, balsams, salvias blaze By vivid dahlias; tiger-lilies burn In scarlet shadow of Jerusalem-cross; Beyond the queen-hydrangeas splendid rule Barbaric marigolds; chrysanthemums Outs.h.i.+ne gladioli, and sunflowers flaunt Their crests of gold beneath the giant gourds.
Within the arbor, script forgot, I muse, While gorgeous hollyhocks sway to and fro To mark the silences, and b.u.t.terflies Flit in and out like some bright memory, And blinding poppies kindle slow watch-fires Before the golden altar of the sun.
A spell lies on the Garden. Summer sits With finger on her lips as if she heard The steps of Autumn echo on the hill.
A hush lies on the Garden. Summer dreams Of timid crocus thrust through drifted snow.
GERTRUDE HUNTINGTON MCGIFFERT
SUN, CARDINAL, AND CORN FLOWERS
Whence gets Earth her gold for thee, O Sunflower?
Her woven, yellow locks so fine Must go to make that gold of thine.
And whence thy red beside the stream, O Cardinal-flower?
She p.r.i.c.ks some vein lies near her heart That thy rich, ruddy hue may start.
And whence thy blue amid the corn, O Corn-flower?
Her deep-blue eyes gleam out in glee, The glories of her work to see.
HANNAH PARKER KIMBALL
SUNFLOWERS
My tall sunflowers love the sun, Love the burning August noons When the locust tunes its viol, And the cricket croons.
When the purple night draws on, With its planets hung on high, And the attared winds of slumber Wander down the sky,
Still my sunflowers love the sun, Keep their ward and watch and wait Till the rosy key of morning Opes the eastern gate.
Then, when they have deeply quaffed From the br.i.m.m.i.n.g cups of dew, You can hear their golden laughter All the garden through.
CLINTON SCOLLARD
THE END OF SUMMER
When poppies in the garden bleed, And coreopsis goes to seed, And pansies, blossoming past their prime, Grow small and smaller all the time, When on the mown field, shrunk and dry, Brown dock and purple thistle lie, And smoke from forest fires at noon Can make the sun appear the moon, When apple seeds, all white before, Begin to darken in the core, I know that summer, scarcely here, Is gone until another year.
EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY