THE WAKING OF THE LARK
O
BONNIE bird that in the brake, exultant, does prepare thee -
As poets do whose thoughts are true — for wings that will
upbear thee,
Oh, tell me, tell me, bonnie bird,
Canst thou not pipe of hope deferred ?
O
BONNIE bird that in the brake, exultant, does prepare thee -
As poets do whose thoughts are true — for wings that will
upbear thee,
Oh, tell me, tell me, bonnie bird,
Canst thou not pipe of hope deferred ?
Warner - World's Best Literature - v28 - Songs, Hymns, Lyrics
]
SECOND VIOLET
How bright it is! the trees, how still they are!
CROCUS
I never saw so bright a star,
As that which stands and shines just over us.
FIRST VIOLET (after a pause)
My leaves feel strange and very tremulous.
CROCUS AND SECOND VIOLET TOGETHER
And mine, and mine!
FIRST VIOLET
O warm, kind sun, appear!
CROCUS
I would the stars were gone, and day were here!
[Just Before Dawn. )
FIRST VIOLET
Sisters! No answer, sisters? Why so still?
ONE TREE TO ANOTHER
Poor little violet, calling through the chill
Of this new frost which did her sister slay,
In which she must herself, too, pass away!
Nay, pretty violet, be not so dismayed:
Sleep only, on your sisters sweet, is laid.
FIRST VIOLET
No pleasant wind about the garden goes:
Perchance the wind has gone to bring the Rose.
## p. 16503 (#203) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16503
O sisters! surely now your sleep is done.
I would we had not looked upon the sun.
My leaves are stiff with pain, O cruel night!
And through my root some sharp thing seems to bite.
Ah me! what pain, what coming change is this?
[She dies.
FIRST TREE
So endeth many a violet's dream of bliss.
PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON.
EVENING SONG
T*
He birds have hid, the winds are low,
The brake is awake, the grass aglow:
The bat is the rover,
No bee on the clover,
The day is over,
And evening come.
The heavy beetle spreads her wings,
The toad has the road, the cricket sings:
The bat is the rover,
No bee on the clover,
The day is over,
And evening come.
JOHN VANCE CHENEY.
BENEDICITE
AL
LL Green Things on the earth, bless ye the Lord! )
So sang the choir while ice-cased branches beat
The frosty window-panes, and at our feet
The frozen, tortured sod but mocked the word,
And seemed to cry like some poor soul in pain,
“Lord, suffering and endurance fill my days;
The growing green things will their Maker praise -
The happy green things, growing in warm rain! )
“So God lacks praise while all the fields are white!
I said; then smiled, remembering southward far,
How pampas grass swayed green in summer light.
Nay, God hears always from this swinging star,
Decani and Cantoris, South and North,
Each answering other, praises pouring forth.
ANNA CALLENDER BRACKETT.
## p. 16504 (#204) ##########################################
16504
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
'TWEEN EARTH AND SKY
SEEDS
EEDS with wings, between earth and sky
Fluttering, fying;
Seeds of a lily with blood-red core
Breathing of myrrh and of giroflore:
Where winds drop them, there must they lie
Living or dying.
1
Some to the garden, some to the wall,
Fluttering, falling;
Some to the river, some to earth:
Those that reach the right soil get birth;
None of the rest have lived at all.
Whose voice is calling ? -
“Here is soil for winged seeds that near,
Fluttering, fearing,
Where they shall root and bourgeon and spread.
Lacking the heart-room the song lies dead:
Half is the song that reaches the ear,
Half is the hearing. ”
AUGUSTA WEBSTER.
SONG OF SUMMER
From (Summer's Last Will and Testament)
F
AIR Summer droops, droop men and beasts therefore;
So fair a summer look for never more:
All good things vanish less than in a day,-
Peace, plenty, pleasure suddenly decay.
Go not yet away, bright soul of the sad year,-
The earth is hell when thou leav'st to appear.
What! shall those flowers that decked thy garland erst,
Upon thy grave be wastefully dispersed ?
O trees, consume your sap in sorrow's source!
Streams, turn to tears your tributary course!
Go not yet hence, bright soul of the sad year, -
The earth is hell when thou leav'st to appear.
THOMAS NASH.
## p. 16505 (#205) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16505
A SUMMER SONG
SUM
(THIRTEENTH CENTURY)
UMMER-HUED
Is the wood,
Heath and field; debonair
Now is seen
White, brown, green,
Blue, red, yellow, everywhere.
Everything
You see spring
Joyously, in full delight;
He whose pains
Dear love deigns
With her favor to requite-
Ah, happy wight!
Whosoe'er
Knows love's care,
Free from care well may be;
Year by year
Brightness clear
Of the May shall he see.
Blithe and gay
All the play
Of glad love shall he fulfill;
Joyous living
Is in the giving
Of high love to whom she will,
Rich in joys still.
He's a churl
Whom a girl
Lovingly shall embrace,
Who'll not cry
“Blest am I » -
Let none such show his face.
This will cure you
(I assure you)
Of all sorrows, all alarms;
What alloy
In his joy
On whom white and pretty arms
Bestow their charms?
ULRICH VON LIECHTENSTEIN.
Translation of Edward T. McLaughlin.
## p. 16506 (#206) ##########################################
16506
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE BATHER
WRX
ARM from her waist her girdle she unwound,
And cast it down on the insensate turf;
Then copse and cove and deep-secluded vale
She scrutinized with keen though timid eyes,
And stood with ear intent to catch each stir
Of leaf or twig or bird-wing rustling there.
Her startled heart beat quicker even to hear
The wild bee woo the blossom with a hymn,
Or hidden insect break its lance of sound
Against the obdurate silence. Then she smiled,
At her own fears amused, and knew herself
God's only image by that hidden shore;
Out from its bonds her wondrous hair she loosed, -
Hair glittering like spun glass, and bright as though
Shot full of golden arrows. Down below
Her supple waist the soft and shimmering coils
Rolled in their bright abundance, goldener
Than was the golden wonder Jason sought.
Her fair hands then, like white doves in a net,
A moment fluttered 'mid the shining threads,
As with a dexterous touch she higher laid
The gleaming tresses on her shapely head,
Beyond the reach of rudely amorous waves.
Then from her throat her light robe she unclasped,
And dropped it downward with a blush that rose
The higher as the garment lower fell.
Then cast she off the sandals from her feet,
And paused upon the brink of that blue lake:
A sight too fair for either gods or men;
An Eve untempted in her Paradise.
The waters into which her young eyes looked
Gave back her image with so true a truth,
She blushed to look; but blushing looked again,
As maidens to their mirrors oft return
With bashful boldness, once again to gaze
Upon the crystal page that renders back
Themselves unto themselves, until their eyes
Confess their love for their own loveliness.
Her rounded cheeks, in each of which had grown,
With sudden blossoming, a fresh red rose,
## p. 16507 (#207) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16507
She hid an instant in her dimpled hands;
Then met her pink palms up above her head,
And whelmed her white shape in the welcoming wave.
Around each lithesome limb the waters twined,
And with their lucent raiment robed her form;
And as her hesitating bosom sunk
To the caresses of bewildered waves,
The foamy pearls from their own foreheads gave
For her fair brow, and showered in her hair
The evanescent diamonds of the deep.
Thus dallying with the circumfluent tide,
Her loveliness half hidden, half revealed,
An Undine with a soul, she plunged and rose,
Whilst the white graces of her rounded arms
She braided with the blue of wandering waves,
And saw the shoulders of the billows yield
Before the even strokes of her small hands,
And laughed to see, and held her crimson mouth
Above the crest of each advancing surge
Like a red blossom pendent o'er a pool;
Till, done with the invigorating play,
Once more she gained the bank, and once again
Saw her twin image in the waters born.
1
2
.
From the translucent wave each beauty grew
To strange perfection. Never statue wrought
By cunning art to fullness of all grace,
And kissed to life by love, could fairer seem
Than she who stood upon that grassy slope
So fresh, so human, so immaculate!
Out from the dusky cloisters of the wood
The nun-like winds stole with a saintly step,
And dried the bright drops from her panting form,
As she with hurried hands once more let down
The golden drapery of her glorious hair,
That fell about her like some royal cloak
Dropped from the sunset's rare and radiant loom.
MARY ASHLEY TOWNSEND.
## p. 16508 (#208) ##########################################
16508
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE HAYMAKERS' SONG
HER
ERE's to him that grows it,
Drink, lads, drink!
That lays it in and mows it,
Clink, jugs, clink!
To him that mows and makes it,
That scatters it and shakes it,
That turns and teds and rakes it,
Clink, jugs, clink!
Now here's to him that stacks it,
Drink, lads, drink!
That thrashes and that tacks it,
Clink, jugs, clink!
That cuts it out for eating,
When March-dropped lambs are bleating,
And the slate-blue clouds are sleeting,
Drink, lads, drink!
And here's to thane and yeoman,
Drink, lads, drink!
To horseman and to bowman,
Clink, jugs, clink!
To lofty and to low man,
Who bears a grudge to no man,
But finches from no foeman,
Drink, lads, drink!
ALFRED AUSTIN.
SEPTEMBER
B.
IRDS that were gray in the green are black in the yellow.
Here where the green remains, rocks one little fellow.
Quaker in gray, do you know that the green is going ?
More than that — do you know that the yellow is showing ?
Singer of songs, do you know that your youth is flying ?
That age will soon at the lock of your life be prying?
Lover of life, do you know that the brown is going ?
More than that — do you know that the gray is showing ?
S. FRANCES HARRISON (“Seranus”).
## p. 16509 (#209) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16509
INDIAN SUMMER
LLC
INGER, O day!
Let not thy purple haze
Fade utterly away.
The Indian summer lays
Her tender touch upon the emerald hills.
Exquisite thrills
Of delicate gladness fill the blue-veined air.
More restful even than rest,
The passionate sweetness that is everywhere.
Soft splendors in the west
Touch with the charm of coming changefulness
The yielding hills.
Oh linger, day!
Let not the dear
Delicious languor of thy dreamfulness
Vanish away!
Serene and clear,
The brooding stillness of the delicate air,
Dreamier than the dreamiest: depths of sleep,
Falls softly everywhere.
Still let me keep
One little hour longer tryst with thee,
O day of days!
Lean down on me,
In tender beauty of thy amethyst haze.
Upon the vine,
Rich clinging clusters of the ripening grape
Hang silent in the sun,
But in each one
Beats with full throb the quickening purple wine,
Whose pulse shall round the perfect fruit to shape.
Too dreamy even to dream,
I hear the murmuring bee and gliding stream;
The singing silence of the afternoon,
Lulling my yielding senses till they swoon
Into still deeper rest:
While soul released from sense,
Passionate and intense,
With quick exultant quiver in its wings,
Prophetic longing for diviner things,
Escapes the unthinking breast;
## p. 16510 (#210) ##########################################
16510
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
Pierces rejoicing through the shining mist,
But shrinks before the keen, cold ether, kissed
By burning stars; delirious foretaste
Of joys the soul — too eager in its haste
To grasp ere won by the diviner right
Of birth through death — is far too weak to bear.
Bathed in earth's lesser light,
Slipping down slowly through the shining air,
Once more it steals into the dreaming breast,
Praying again to be its patient guest.
And as my senses wake,
The beautiful glad soul again to take,
The twilight falls.
A lonely wood-thrush calls
The day away.
«Where hast thou been to-day,
O soul of mine ? » I wondering question her.
She will not answer while the light winds stir
And rustle near to hear what she may say.
Thou needst not linger, day!
My soul and I
Would hold high converse of diviner things.
Unfold thy wings;
Wrap softly round thyself thy delicate haze,
And gliding down the slowly darkening ways,
Vanish away!
ALICE WELLINGTON Rollins.
INDIAN SUMMER
T"
HESE are the days when birds come back,-
A very few, a bird or two, -
To take a backward look.
These are the days when skies put on
The old, old sophistries of June, -
A blue-and-gold mistake.
Oh! fraud that almost cheats the bee,
Almost thy plausibility
Induces my belief;
## p. 16511 (#211) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16511
Till ranks of seeds their witness bear,
And softly through the altered air
Hurries a timid leaf!
Oh, sacrament of summer days!
Oh, last communion in the haze!
Permit a child to join -
Thy sacred emblems to partake,
Thy consecrated bread to break,
Taste thine immortal wine.
EMILY DICKINSON,
NOVEMBER IN THE SOUTH
THIS
his livelong day I listen to the fall
Of hickory-nuts and acorns to the ground,
The croak of rain-crows and the blue-jay's call,
The woodman's axe that hews with muffled sound.
.
And like a spendthrift in a threadbare coat
That still retains a dash of crimson hue,
An old woodpecker chatters forth a note
About the better summer days he knew.
Across the road a ruined cabin stands,
With ragweeds and with thistles at its door,
While withered cypress-vines hang tattered strands
About its falling roof and rotting floor.
In yonder forest nook no sound is heard,
Save when the walnuts patter on the earth,
Or when by winds the hectic leaves are stirred
To dance like witches in their maniac mirth.
Down in the orchard hang the golden pears,
Half honeycombed by yellowhammer beaks ;
Near by, a dwarfed and twisted apple bears
Its fruit, brown-red as Amazonian cheeks.
The lonesome landscape seems as if it yearned
Like our own aching hearts, when first we knew
The one love of our life was not returned,
Or first we found an old-time friend untrue.
## p. 16512 (#212) ##########################################
16512
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
At last the night comes, and the broad white moon
Is welcomed by the owl with frenzied glee;
The fat opossum, like a satyr, soon
Blinks at its light from yon persimmon-tree.
The raccoon starts to hear long-dreaded sounds
Amid his scattered spoils of ripened corn,
The cry of negroes and the yelp of hounds,
The wild rude pealing of a hunter's horn.
At last a gray mist covers all the land
Until we seem to wander in a cloud,
Far, far away upon some elfin strand
Where sorrow drapes us in a mildewed shroud.
No voice is heard in field or forest nigh
To break the desolation of the spell,
Save one sad mocking-bird in boughs near by,
Who sings like Tasso in his madman's cell;
While one magnolia blossom, ghostly white,
Like high-born Leonora, lingering there,
Haughty and splendid in the lonesome night,
Is pale with passion in her dumb despair.
WALTER MALONE.
THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS
'T
WAS the night before Christmas, when all through the
Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse: [house
The stockings were hung by the chimney with care,
In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there;
The children were nestled all snug in their beds,
While visions of sugar-plums danced through their heads;
And mamma in her kerchief, and I in my cap,
Had just settled our brains for a long winter's nap,–
When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter,
I sprang from my bed to see what was the matter.
Away to the window I flew like a flash,
Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash.
The moon, on the breast of the new-fallen snow,
Gave a lustre of midday to objects below;
## p. 16513 (#213) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16513
When what to my wondering eyes should api ear
But a miniature sleigh, and eight tiny reindeer,
With a little old driver, so lively and quick
I knew in a moment it must be St. Nick.
More rapid than eagles his coursers they came,
And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name:
«Now, Dasher! now, Dancer! now, Prancer! now, Vixen!
On, Comet! on, Cupid! on, Dunder and Blitzen!
To the top of the porch, to the top of the wall!
Now dash away, dash away, dash away all! »
As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,
When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky,
So up to the house-top the coursers they flew,
With the sleigh full of toys, and St. Nicholas too.
And then in a twinkling I heard on the roof
The prancing and pawing of each little hoof.
As I drew in my head, and was turning around,
Down the chimney St. Nicholas came with a bound.
He was dressed all in fur from his head to his foot,
And his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot;
A bundle of toys he had fung on his back,
And he looked like a peddler just opening his pack
His eyes how they twinkled! his dimples how merry!
His cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry;
His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow,
And the beard on his chin was as white as the snow.
The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth,
And the smoke, it encircled his head like a wreath.
He had a broad face, and a little round belly
That shook, when he laughed, like a bowlful of jelly.
He was chubby and plump,- a right jolly old elf, -
And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself.
A wink of his eye, and a twist of his head,
Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread.
He spake not a word, but went straight to his work,
And filled all the stockings; then turned with a jerk,
And laying his finger aside of his nose,
And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose.
He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle,
And away they all flew like the down of a thistle;
But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight,
“Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night! ”
CLEMENT CLARKE MOORE.
XXVIII-1033
## p. 16514 (#214) ##########################################
16514
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE FROST
THE
HE Frost looked forth, one still, clear night,
And he said, “Now I shall be out of sight;
So through the valley and over the height
In silence I'll take my way.
I will not go like that blustering train,
The wind and the snow, the hail and the rain,
Who make so much bustle and noise in vain,
But I'll be as busy. as they! ”
Then he went to the mountain, and powdered its crest;
He climbed up the trees, and their boughs he dressed
With diamonds and pearls; and over the breast
Of the quivering lake he spread
A coat of mail, that it need not fear
The downward point of many a spear
That he hung on its margin, far and near,
Where a rock could reach its head.
He went to the windows of those who slept,
And over the pane like a fairy crept:
Wherever he breathed, wherever he stepped,
By the light of the moon were seen
Most beautiful things. There were flowers and trees,
There were bevies of birds and swarms of bees,
There were cities, thrones, temples, and towers, and these
All pictured in silver sheen!
(
But he did one thing that was hardly fair:
He peeped in the cupboard, and finding there
That all had forgotten for him to prepare,-
“Now, just to set them a-thinking,
I'll bite this basket of fruit,” said he;
« This costly pitcher I'll burst in three;
And the glass of water they've left for me
Shall (tchick! ) to tell them I'm drinking. ”
HANNAH FRANCES GOULD.
## p. 16515 (#215) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16515
1
THE ROOT'S DREAM
F
ROM the dark earth cool and fragrant,
A gnarled unlovely root
Sent forth in the rippling sunshine
A slender gold-green shoot.
The shoot in the languid breezes
Was soon by a pale bloom bent;
A sense of its frail white beauty
The sun to the black root sent.
1
The root was thrilled by a vision,
A vision of peace supreme ;-
The fragile star of a blossom
Was the black root's dainty dream.
1
R. K. MUNKITTRICK.
#
WILD HONEY
3
W***
HERE hints of racy sap and gum
Out of the old dark forest come;
Where birds their beaks like hammers wield,
And pith is pierced, and bark is peeled;
Where the green walnut's outer rind
Gives precious bitterness to the wind;-
There lurks the sweet creative power,
As lurks the honey in the flower.
In winter's bud that bursts in spring,
In nut of autumn's ripening,
In acrid bulb beneath the mold,
Sleeps the elixir, strong and old,
E
That Rosicrucians sought in vain,-
Life that renews itself again!
What bottled perfume is so good
As fragrance of split tulip-wood ?
What fabled drink of god or Muse
Was rich as purple mulberry-juice ?
## p. 16516 (#216) ##########################################
16516
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
And what school-polished gem of thought
Is like the rune from Nature caught ?
He is a poet strong and true
Who loves wild thyme and honey-dew;
And like a brown bee works and sings
With morning freshness on his wings,
And a gold burden on his thighs, -
The pollen-dust of centuries!
MAURICE THOMPSON.
THE WAKING OF THE LARK
O
BONNIE bird that in the brake, exultant, does prepare thee -
As poets do whose thoughts are true — for wings that will
upbear thee,
Oh, tell me, tell me, bonnie bird,
Canst thou not pipe of hope deferred ?
Or canst thou sing of naught but spring among the golden meadows?
Methinks a bard (and thou art one) should suit his song to sorrow;
And tell of pain, as well as gain, that waits us on the morrow:
But thou art not a prophet, thou,
If naught but joy can touch thee now;
If, in thy heart, thou hast no vow that speaks of Nature's anguish.
Oh, I have held my sorrows dear, and felt, though poor and slighted,
The songs we love are those we hear when love is unrequited.
But thou art still the slave of dawn,
And canst not sing till night be gone,
Till o'er the pathway of the fawn the sunbeams shine and quiver.
Thou art the minion of the sun that rises in his splendor,
And canst not spare for Dian fair the songs that should attend her:
The moon, so sad and silver pale,
Is mistress of the nightingale;
And thou wilt sing on hill and dale no ditties in the darkness.
For queen and king thou wilt not spare one note of thine outpouring;
And thou'rt as free as breezes be on Nature's velvet flooring :
The daisy, with its hood undone,
The grass, the sunlight, and the sun
These are the joys, thou holy one, that pay thee for thy singing.
## p. 16517 (#217) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16517
Oh, hush! Oh, hush! how wild a gush of rapture in the distance -
A roll of rhymes, a toll of chimes, a cry for love's assistance;
A sound that wells from happy throats,
A flood of song where beauty foats,
And where our thoughts, like golden boats, do seem to cross a river.
This is the advent of the lark,– the priest in gray apparel, -
Who doth prepare to trill in air his sinless summer carol;
This is the prelude to the lay
The birds did sing in Cæsar's day,
And will again, for aye and aye, in praise of God's creation.
O dainty thing, on wonder's wing, by life and love elated,
Oh, sing aloud from cloud to cloud, till day be consecrated;
Till from the gateways of the morn,
The sun, with all his light unshorn,
His robes of darkness round him torn, doth scale the lofty heavens!
ERIC MACKAY.
TO THE LARK
(T'R EHEDYDD)
S
ENTINEL of the morning light!
Reveler of the spring!
How sweetly, nobly wild thy flight,
Thy boundless journeying:
Far from thy brethren of the woods, alone,
A hermit chorister before God's throne !
Oh! wilt thou climb yon heavens for me,
Yon rampart's starry height,
Thou interlude of melody
'Twixt darkness and the light,
And seek with heaven's first dawn upon thy crest.
My lady-love, the moonbeam of the west ?
No woodland caroler art thou;
Far from the archer's eye,
Thy course is o'er the mountain's brow,
Thy music in the sky:
Then fearless float thy path of cloud along,
Thou earthly denizen of angel song.
DAFYDD AP GWILYM.
(Welsh, Fourteenth Century. )
## p. 16518 (#218) ##########################################
16518
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
MEADOW-LARKS
S)
WEET, sweet, sweet! Oh happy that I am!
(Listen to the meadow-larks, across the fields that sing ! )
Sweet, sweet, sweet! O subtle breath of balm,
O winds that blow, O buds that grow, O rapture of the
spring!
Sweet, sweet, sweet! O skies, serene and blue,
That shut the velvet pastures in, that fold the mountain's
crest!
Sweet, sweet, sweet! What of the clouds ye knew?
The vessels ride a golden tide, upon a sea at rest.
Sweet, sweet, sweet! Who prates of care and pain ?
Who says that life is sorrowful? O life so glad, so fleet!
Ah! he who lives the noblest life finds life the noblest gain,
The tears of pain a tender rain to make its waters sweet.
Sweet, sweet, sweet! O happy world that is!
Dear heart, I hear across the fields my mateling pipe and call.
Sweet, sweet, sweet! Oworld so full of bliss, –
For life is love, the world is love, and love is over all!
INA D. COOLBRITH.
MORNING SONG
T"
He lark now leaves his watery nest,
And climbing shakes his dewy wings:
He takes this window for the east;
And to implore your light, he sings.
Awake, awake! the morn will never rise,
Till she can dress her beauty at your eyes.
The merchant bows unto the seaman's star,
The plowman from the sun his season takes,
But still the lover wonders what they are
Who look for day before his mistress wakes. ·
Awake, awake, break through your veils of lawn,
Then draw your curtains, and begin the dawn.
SIR WILLIAM DAVENANT.
## p. 16519 (#219) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16519
THE O’LINCON FAMILY
A
FLOCK of merry singing-birds was sporting in the grove;
Some were warbling cheerily, and some were making love:
There were Bobolincon, Wadolincon, Winterseeble, Conquedle,-
A livelier set was never led by tabor, pipe, or fiddle, -
Crying, Phew, shew, Wadolincon, see, see, Bobolincon,
Down among the tickletops, hiding in the buttercups!
I know the saucy chap, I see his shining cap
Bobbing in the clover there,- see, see, see! ”
Up flies Bobolincon, perching on an apple-tree,
Startled by his rival's song, quickened by his raillery;
Soon he spies the rogue afloat, curvetting in the air,
And merrily he turns about, and warns him to beware!
« 'Tis you that would a-wooing go, down among the rushes O!
But wait a week, till flowers are cheery,— wait a week, and ere you
marry,
Be sure of a house wherein to tarry!
Wadolink, Whiskodink, Tom Denny, wait, wait, wait! »
Every one's a funny fellow; every one's a little mellow:
Follow, follow, follow, follow, o'er the hill and in the hollow!
Merrily, merrily, there they hie; now they rise and now they fly;
They cross and turn, and in and out, and down in the middle, and
wheel about,-
With a
Phew, shew, Wadolincon! listen to me, Bobolincon!
Happy's the wooing that's speedily doing, that's speedily doing,
That's merry and over with the bloom of the clover!
Bobolincon, Wadolincon, Winterseeble, follow, follow me! »
Oh what a happy life they lead, over the hill and in the mead!
Now they gambol o'er the clearing - off again, and then appearing;
How they sing, and how they play! see, they fly away, away!
Poised aloft on quivering wing, now they soar, and now they sing:
“We inust all be merry and moving; we must all be happy and
loving;
For when the midsummer has come, and the grain has ripened its
ear,
The haymakers scatter our young, and we mourn for the rest of the
year.
Then, Bobolincon, Wadolincon, Winterseeble, haste, haste away! )
WILSON FLAGG.
## p. 16520 (#220) ##########################################
16520
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
TO THE WOOD-ROBIN
THE
He wooing air is jubilant with song,
And blossoms swell
As leaps thy liquid melody along
The dusky dell,
Where Silence, late supreme, foregoes her wonted spell.
Ah, whence, in sylvan solitudes remote,
Hast learned the lore
That breeds delight in every echoing note
The woodlands o'er;
As when, through slanting sun, descends the quickening
shower?
Thy hermitage is peopled with the dreams
That gladden sleep:
Here Fancy dallies with delirious themes
Mid shadows deep,
Till eyes unused to tears, with wild emotions weep.
We rise, alas, to find our visions fled!
But thine remain.
Night weaves of golden harmonies the thread,
And fills thy brain
With joys that overflow in Love's awakening strain.
Yet thou, from mortal influence apart,
Seek'st naught of praise;
The empty plaudits of the emptier heart
Taint not thy lays:
Thy Maker's smile alone thy tuneful bosom sways.
Teach me, thou warbling eremite, to sing
Thy rhapsody:
Nor borne on vain ambition's vaunting wing,
But led of thee,
To rise from earthly dreams to hymn Eternity.
JOHN B. TABB.
## p. 16521 (#221) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16521
THE THRUSH'S SONG
(FROM THE GAELIC)
D
EAR, dear, dear,
In the rocky glen,
Far away, far away, far away,
The haunts of men:
There shall we dwell in love
With the lark and the dove,
Cuckoo and corn-rail;
Feast on the bearded snail,
Worm and gilded fly;
Drink of the crystal rill
Winding adown the hill
Never to dry.
With glee, with glee, with glee,
Cheer up, cheer up, cheer up here;
Nothing to harm us, then sing merrily,
Sing to the loved one whose nest is near.
Qui, qui, queen, quip,
Tiurru, tiurru, chipiwi;
Too-tee, too-tee, chin-choo,
Chirri, chirri, chooce,
Quin, qui, qui!
W. MACGILLIVRAY.
THE SONG OF THE THRUSH
I
WAS on the margin of a plain,
Under a wide-spreading tree,
Hearing the song
Of the wild birds;
Listening to the language
Of the thrush cock,
Who from the wood of the valley
Composed a verse;
From the wood of the steep
He sang exquisitely.
Speckled was his breast
Amongst the green leaves,
As upon branches
Of a thousand blossoms
## p. 16522 (#222) ##########################################
16522
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
1
On the bank of a brook,
All heard
With the dawn the song,
Like a silver bell;
Performing a sacrifice
Until the hour of forenoon;
Upon the green altar
Ministering Bardism.
From the branches of the hazel
Of green broad leaves
He sings an ode
To God the Creator:
With a carol of love
From the green glade
To all in the hollow
Of the glen who love him;
Balm of the heart
To those who love.
I had from his beak
The voice of inspiration,
A song of metres
That gratified me;
Glad was I made
By his minstrelsy.
Then respectfully
Uttered I an address
From the stream of the valley
To the bird:
I requested urgently
His undertaking a message
To the fair one
Where dwells my affection.
Gone is the bard of the leaves
From the small twigs
To the second Lunet,
The sun of the maidens!
To the streams of the plain
St. Mary prosper him,
To bring to me,
Under the green woods
The hue of the snow of one night,
Without delay.
Rhys Goch AP RHICCART (Welsh).
## p. 16523 (#223) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16523
THE SERVICE OF SONG
SOM
OME keep the Sabbath going to church:
I keep it staying at home,
With a bobolink for a chorister
And an orchard for a dome.
Some keep the Sabbath in surplice:
I just wear my wings;
And instead of tolling the bell for church,
Our little sexton sings.
God preaches, a noted clergyman,
And the sermon is never long;
So instead of getting to heaven at last,
I'm going all along !
EMILY DICKINSON.
EARLY SPRING
O
TREES, all a-throb and a-quiver
With the stirring pulse of the spring,
Your tops so misty against the blue,
With the buds where the green not yet looks through,
I know the beauty the days will bring,
But your cloudy tops are a wonderful thing!
Like the first faint streak of the dawning,
Which tells that the day is nigh;
Like the first dear kiss of the maiden,
So absolute, though so shy;
Like the joy divine of the mother
Before her child she sees —
So faint, so dear, and so blessed
Are your misty tops, 0 trees!
I can feel the delicate pulses
That stir in each restless fold
Of leaflets and bunches of blossoms
The life that never grows old:
Yet wait, ah wait, though they woo you —
The sun, the rain-drops, the breeze;
Break not too soon into verdure,
O misty, beautiful trees!
ANNA CALLENDER BRACKETT.
## p. 16524 (#224) ##########################################
16524
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
TO A DAISY
AM!
h! I'm feared thou's come too sooin,
Little daisy !
Pray whativer wor ta doin'?
Are ta crazy ?
Winter winds are blowin' yet:
Tha'll be starved, mi little pet!
Did a gleam o' sunshine warm thee,
An' deceive thee?
Niver let appearance charm thee:
Yes, believe me,
Smiles tha'lt find are oft but snares
Laid to catch thee unawares.
An' yet, I think it looks a shame
To talk such stuff;
I've lost heart, an' thou'lt do t' same,
Ay, sooin enough!
An', if thou’rt happy as tha art,
Trustin' must be twisest part.
Come! I'll pile some bits o' stoan
Round thi dwellin';
They may cheer thee when I've goan, -
Theer's no tellin':
An' when spring's mild day draws near,
I'll release thee, niver fear!
An' if then thi pretty face
Greets me smilin',
I may come an' sit by th' place,
Time beguilin';
Glad to think I'd paar to be
Of some use, if but to thee!
JOHN HARTLEY.
BACCHUS
ISTEN to the tawny thief,
Hid behind the waxen leaf,
Growling at his fairy host, -
Bidding her with angry boast
L
## p. 16525 (#225) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16525
Fill his cup with wine distilled
From the dew the dawn has spilled :
Stored away in golden casks
Is the precious draught he asks.
Who — who makes this mimic din
In this mimic meadow inn,
Sings in such a drowsy note,
Wears a golden-belted coat;
Loiters in the dainty room
Of this tavern of perfume;
Dares to linger at the cup
Till the yellow sun is up?
1
1
Bacchus 'tis, come back again
To the busy haunts of men;
Garlanded and gayly dressed,
Bands of gold about his breast;
Straying from his paradise,
Having pinions angel-wise. -
'Tis the honey-bee, who goes
Reveling within a rose!
FRANK DEMPSTER SHERMAN.
SPRING
From (Summer's Last Will and Testament)
S"
PRING, the sweet Spring, is the year's pleasant king:
Then blooms each thing, then maids dance in a ring;
Cold doth not sting, the pretty birds do sing –
Cuckoo, jug, jug, pu we, to witta woo.
The palm and may make country-houses gay;
Lambs frisk and play, the shepherds pipe all day;
And we hear aye birds tune this merry lay -
Cuckoo, jug, jug, pu we, to witta woo.
The fields breathe sweet, the daisies kiss our feet;
Young lovers meet, old wives a-sunning sit;
In every street these tunes our ears do greet -
Cuckoo, jug, jug, pu we, to witta woo.
Spring, the sweet Spring.
THOMAS NASH.
## p. 16526 (#226) ##########################################
16526
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE APPLE-TREE
From Poems) by Julia C. R. Dorr. Copyright 1874, 1885, 1892, by Charles
Scribner's Sons
G
RACEFUL and lithe and tall,
It stands by the garden wall,
In the flush of its pink-white bloom
Elate with its own perfume,
Tossing its young bright head
In the first glad joy of May,
While its singing leaves sing back
To the bird on the dancing spray.
“I'm alive! I'm abloom ! » it cries
To the winds and the laughing skies.
Ho! for the gay young apple-tree
That stands by the garden wall!
Sturdy and broad and tall,
Over the garden wall
It spreads its branches wide –
A bower on either side.
For the bending boughs hang low;
And with shouts and gay turmoil
The children gather like bees
To garner the golden spoil;
While the smiling mother sings,
Rejoice for the gift it brings!
Ho! for the laden apple-tree
That stands by our garden wall! »
The strong swift years fly past,
Each swifter than the last;
And the tree by the garden wall
Sees joy and grief befall.
Still from the spreading boughs
Some golden apples swing;
But the children come no more
For the autumn harvesting.
The tangled grass lies deep
Where the long path used to creep:
Yet ho! for the brave old apple-tree
That leans over the crumbling wall!
New generations pass,
Like shadows on the grass.
## p. 16527 (#227) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16527
What is there that remains
For all their toil and pains ?
A little hollow place
Where once a hearthstone lay;
An empty, silent space
Whence life hath gone away;
Tall brambles where the lilacs grew,
Some fennel, and a clump of rue,
And this one gnarled old apple-tree
Where once was the garden wall!
JULIA C. R. DORR.
THE HOUSE OF THE TREES
O"
PE your doors and take me in,
Spirit of the wood;
Wash me clean of dust and din,
Clothe me in your mood.
Take me from the noisy light
To the sunless peace,
Where at midday standeth Night,
Signing Toil's release.
All your dusky twilight stores
To my senses give;
Take me in and lock the doors,
Show me how to live.
Lift your leafy roof for me,
Part your yielding walls;
Let me wander lingeringly
Through your scented halls.
Ope your doors and take me in,
Spirit of the wood;
Take me- make me next of kin
To your leafy brood.
ETHELWYN WETHERALD.
## p. 16528 (#228) ##########################################
16528
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
IN GREEN OLD GARDENS
IN
N GREEN old gardens hidden away
From sight of revel and sound of strife,
Where the bird may sing out his soul ere he dies,
Nor fears for the night, so he lives his day;
Where the high red walls, which are growing gray
With their lichen and moss embroideries,
Seem sadly and sternl to shut out Life,
Because it is often as sad as they;
Where even the bee has time to glide
(Gathering gayly his honeyed store)
Right to the heart of the old-world flowers,
China-asters and purple stocks,
Dahlias and tall red hollyhocks,
Laburnums raining their golden showers,
Columbines prim of the folded core,
And lupins, and larkspurs, and "London pride”;
Where the heron is waiting amongst the reeds,
Grown tame in the silence that reigns around,
Broken only, now and then,
By shy woodpecker or noisy jay,
By the far-off watch-dog's muffled bay;
But where never the purposeless laughter of men,
Or the seething city's murmurous sound,
Will float up under the river-weeds;
Here may I live what life I please,
Married and buried out of sight,-
Married to pleasure, and buried to pain,-
Hidden away amongst scenes like these,
Under the fans of the chestnut-trees;
Living my child-life over again,
With the further hope of a fuller delight,
Blithe as the birds and wise as the bees.
In green old gardens hidden away
From sight of revel and sound of strife, -
Here have I leisure to breathe and move,
And to do my work in a nobler way;
To sing my songs, and to say my say;
## p. 16529 (#229) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16529
To dream my dreams, and to love my love;
To hold my faith, and to live my life,
Making the most of its shadowy day.
« VIOLET FANE” (Lady Currie).
A BENEDICTINE GARDEN
Thr
HROUGH all the wind-blown aisles of May
Faint bells of perfume swing and fall.
Within this apple-petaled wall
(A gray east flecked with rosy day)
The pink Laburnum lays her cheek
In married, matchless, lovely bliss,
Against her golden mate, to seek
His airy kiss.
Tulips, in faded splendor drest,
Brood o'er their beds, a slumbrous gloom;
Dame Peony, red and ripe with bloom,
Swells the silk housing of her breast;
The Lilac, drunk to ecstasy,
Breaks her full flagons on the air,
And drenches home the reeling bee
Who found her fair.
O cowlèd legion of the Cross,
What solemn pleasantry is thine,
Vowing to seek the life divine
Through abnegation and through loss!
Men but make monuments of sin
Who walk the earth's ambitious round;
Thou hast the richer realm within
This garden ground.
No woman's voice hath sweeter note
Than chanting of this plumèd choir;
No jewel ever wore the fire
Hung on the dewdrop's quivering throat.
A ruddier pomp and pageantry
Than world's delight o'erfleets thy sod;
And choosing this, thou hast in fee
The peace of God.
ALICE BROWN.
XXVIII-1034
## p. 16530 (#230) ##########################################
16530
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE BLACKBERRY FARM
NT
ATURE gives with freèst hands
Richest gifts to poorest lands.
When the lord has sown his last,
And his field's to desert passed,
She begins to claim her own,
And instead of harvest flown-
Sunburnt sheaves and golden ears —
Sends her hardier pioneers:
Barbarous brambles, outlawed seeds;
The first families of weeds
Fearing neither sun nor wind,
With the flowers of their kind
(Outcasts of the garden-bound),
Colonize the expended ground,
Using (none her right gainsay)
Confiscations of decay:
Thus she clothes the barren place,
Old disgrace, with newer grace.
)
Title-deeds, which cover lands
Ruled and reaped by buried hands,
She — disowning owners old,
Scorning their “to have and hold”.
Takes herself: the moldering fence
Hides with her munificence;
O'er the crumbled gate-post twines
Her proprietary vines;
On the doorstep of the house
Writes in moss Anonymous,”
And, that beast and bird may see,
« This is Public Property;"
To the bramble makes the sun
Bearer of profusion;
Blossom-odors breathe in June
Promise of her later boon,
And in August's brazen heat
Grows the prophecy complete ;-
Lo, her largess glistens bright,
Blackness diamonded with light!
C
Then, behold, she welcomes all
To her annual festival:
## p. 16531 (#231) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16531
Mine the fruit, but yours as well,”
Speaks the Mother Miracle;
«Rich and poor are welcome; come,
Make to-day millennium
In my garden of the sun:
Black and white to me are one.
This my freehold use content,-
Here no landlord rides for rent;
I proclaim my jubilee,
In my Black Republic, free.
Come,” she beckons; “enter, through
Gates of gossamer, doors of dew
(Lit with summer's tropic fire),
My Liberia of the brier. »
JOHN JAMES PIATT.
FROM A POEM ON THOREAU
I
F I could find that little poem,
With the daintiest sort of proem,
Which the poet squirrel made
On a leaf that would not fade,
And slyly hid, one darksome night,
By the wicked glow-worm's light!
It was all about Thoreau-
How the squirrels loved him so;
Since, whenever he went walking,
He would stop to hear them talking,-
Often smiling when they chattered,
Or their brown nuts downward pattered:
Nay, could I but find that bird
Who told me once that she had heard
Robins, wrens, and others tell
How he knew their language well,
And how he turned, a thousand times,
Birdic into English rhymes!
H. A. BLOOD.
## p. 16532 (#232) ##########################################
16532
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE SOUTH
N
IGHT; and beneath star-blazoned summer skies
Behold the spirit of the musky South,-
A creole, with still-burning, languid eyes,
Voluptuous limbs and incense-breathing mouth:
Swathed in spun gauze is she,
From fibres of her own anana tree.
Within these sumptuous woods she lies at ease,
By rich night-breezes, dewy cool, caressed:
'Twixt cypresses and slim palmetto-trees,
Like to the golden oriole's hanging nest,
Her airy hammock swings,
And through the dark her mocking-bird yet sings.
How beautiful she is! A tulip-wreath
Twines round her shadowy, free-floating hair:
Young, weary, passionate, and sad as death,
Dark visions haunt for her the vacant air,
While movelessly she lies
With lithe, lax, folded hands and heavy eyes.
Full well knows she how wide and fair extend
Her groves bright-flowered, her tangled everglades,
Majestic streams that indolently wend
Through lush savanna or dense forest shades,
Where the brown buzzard flies
To broad bayous 'neath hazy-golden skies.
Hers is the savage splendor of the swamp,
With pomp of scarlet and of purple bloom;
Where blow warm, furtive breezes faint and damp,
Strange insects whir, and stalking bitterns boom
Where from stale waters dead
Oft looms the great-jawed alligator's head.
Her wealth, her beauty, and the blight on these,
Of all she is aware: luxuriant woods,
Fresh, living, sunlit, in her dream she sees;
And ever midst those verdant solitudes
The soldier's wooden cross,
O'ergrown by creeping tendrils and rank moss.
Was hers a dream of empire ?
SECOND VIOLET
How bright it is! the trees, how still they are!
CROCUS
I never saw so bright a star,
As that which stands and shines just over us.
FIRST VIOLET (after a pause)
My leaves feel strange and very tremulous.
CROCUS AND SECOND VIOLET TOGETHER
And mine, and mine!
FIRST VIOLET
O warm, kind sun, appear!
CROCUS
I would the stars were gone, and day were here!
[Just Before Dawn. )
FIRST VIOLET
Sisters! No answer, sisters? Why so still?
ONE TREE TO ANOTHER
Poor little violet, calling through the chill
Of this new frost which did her sister slay,
In which she must herself, too, pass away!
Nay, pretty violet, be not so dismayed:
Sleep only, on your sisters sweet, is laid.
FIRST VIOLET
No pleasant wind about the garden goes:
Perchance the wind has gone to bring the Rose.
## p. 16503 (#203) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16503
O sisters! surely now your sleep is done.
I would we had not looked upon the sun.
My leaves are stiff with pain, O cruel night!
And through my root some sharp thing seems to bite.
Ah me! what pain, what coming change is this?
[She dies.
FIRST TREE
So endeth many a violet's dream of bliss.
PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON.
EVENING SONG
T*
He birds have hid, the winds are low,
The brake is awake, the grass aglow:
The bat is the rover,
No bee on the clover,
The day is over,
And evening come.
The heavy beetle spreads her wings,
The toad has the road, the cricket sings:
The bat is the rover,
No bee on the clover,
The day is over,
And evening come.
JOHN VANCE CHENEY.
BENEDICITE
AL
LL Green Things on the earth, bless ye the Lord! )
So sang the choir while ice-cased branches beat
The frosty window-panes, and at our feet
The frozen, tortured sod but mocked the word,
And seemed to cry like some poor soul in pain,
“Lord, suffering and endurance fill my days;
The growing green things will their Maker praise -
The happy green things, growing in warm rain! )
“So God lacks praise while all the fields are white!
I said; then smiled, remembering southward far,
How pampas grass swayed green in summer light.
Nay, God hears always from this swinging star,
Decani and Cantoris, South and North,
Each answering other, praises pouring forth.
ANNA CALLENDER BRACKETT.
## p. 16504 (#204) ##########################################
16504
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
'TWEEN EARTH AND SKY
SEEDS
EEDS with wings, between earth and sky
Fluttering, fying;
Seeds of a lily with blood-red core
Breathing of myrrh and of giroflore:
Where winds drop them, there must they lie
Living or dying.
1
Some to the garden, some to the wall,
Fluttering, falling;
Some to the river, some to earth:
Those that reach the right soil get birth;
None of the rest have lived at all.
Whose voice is calling ? -
“Here is soil for winged seeds that near,
Fluttering, fearing,
Where they shall root and bourgeon and spread.
Lacking the heart-room the song lies dead:
Half is the song that reaches the ear,
Half is the hearing. ”
AUGUSTA WEBSTER.
SONG OF SUMMER
From (Summer's Last Will and Testament)
F
AIR Summer droops, droop men and beasts therefore;
So fair a summer look for never more:
All good things vanish less than in a day,-
Peace, plenty, pleasure suddenly decay.
Go not yet away, bright soul of the sad year,-
The earth is hell when thou leav'st to appear.
What! shall those flowers that decked thy garland erst,
Upon thy grave be wastefully dispersed ?
O trees, consume your sap in sorrow's source!
Streams, turn to tears your tributary course!
Go not yet hence, bright soul of the sad year, -
The earth is hell when thou leav'st to appear.
THOMAS NASH.
## p. 16505 (#205) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16505
A SUMMER SONG
SUM
(THIRTEENTH CENTURY)
UMMER-HUED
Is the wood,
Heath and field; debonair
Now is seen
White, brown, green,
Blue, red, yellow, everywhere.
Everything
You see spring
Joyously, in full delight;
He whose pains
Dear love deigns
With her favor to requite-
Ah, happy wight!
Whosoe'er
Knows love's care,
Free from care well may be;
Year by year
Brightness clear
Of the May shall he see.
Blithe and gay
All the play
Of glad love shall he fulfill;
Joyous living
Is in the giving
Of high love to whom she will,
Rich in joys still.
He's a churl
Whom a girl
Lovingly shall embrace,
Who'll not cry
“Blest am I » -
Let none such show his face.
This will cure you
(I assure you)
Of all sorrows, all alarms;
What alloy
In his joy
On whom white and pretty arms
Bestow their charms?
ULRICH VON LIECHTENSTEIN.
Translation of Edward T. McLaughlin.
## p. 16506 (#206) ##########################################
16506
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE BATHER
WRX
ARM from her waist her girdle she unwound,
And cast it down on the insensate turf;
Then copse and cove and deep-secluded vale
She scrutinized with keen though timid eyes,
And stood with ear intent to catch each stir
Of leaf or twig or bird-wing rustling there.
Her startled heart beat quicker even to hear
The wild bee woo the blossom with a hymn,
Or hidden insect break its lance of sound
Against the obdurate silence. Then she smiled,
At her own fears amused, and knew herself
God's only image by that hidden shore;
Out from its bonds her wondrous hair she loosed, -
Hair glittering like spun glass, and bright as though
Shot full of golden arrows. Down below
Her supple waist the soft and shimmering coils
Rolled in their bright abundance, goldener
Than was the golden wonder Jason sought.
Her fair hands then, like white doves in a net,
A moment fluttered 'mid the shining threads,
As with a dexterous touch she higher laid
The gleaming tresses on her shapely head,
Beyond the reach of rudely amorous waves.
Then from her throat her light robe she unclasped,
And dropped it downward with a blush that rose
The higher as the garment lower fell.
Then cast she off the sandals from her feet,
And paused upon the brink of that blue lake:
A sight too fair for either gods or men;
An Eve untempted in her Paradise.
The waters into which her young eyes looked
Gave back her image with so true a truth,
She blushed to look; but blushing looked again,
As maidens to their mirrors oft return
With bashful boldness, once again to gaze
Upon the crystal page that renders back
Themselves unto themselves, until their eyes
Confess their love for their own loveliness.
Her rounded cheeks, in each of which had grown,
With sudden blossoming, a fresh red rose,
## p. 16507 (#207) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16507
She hid an instant in her dimpled hands;
Then met her pink palms up above her head,
And whelmed her white shape in the welcoming wave.
Around each lithesome limb the waters twined,
And with their lucent raiment robed her form;
And as her hesitating bosom sunk
To the caresses of bewildered waves,
The foamy pearls from their own foreheads gave
For her fair brow, and showered in her hair
The evanescent diamonds of the deep.
Thus dallying with the circumfluent tide,
Her loveliness half hidden, half revealed,
An Undine with a soul, she plunged and rose,
Whilst the white graces of her rounded arms
She braided with the blue of wandering waves,
And saw the shoulders of the billows yield
Before the even strokes of her small hands,
And laughed to see, and held her crimson mouth
Above the crest of each advancing surge
Like a red blossom pendent o'er a pool;
Till, done with the invigorating play,
Once more she gained the bank, and once again
Saw her twin image in the waters born.
1
2
.
From the translucent wave each beauty grew
To strange perfection. Never statue wrought
By cunning art to fullness of all grace,
And kissed to life by love, could fairer seem
Than she who stood upon that grassy slope
So fresh, so human, so immaculate!
Out from the dusky cloisters of the wood
The nun-like winds stole with a saintly step,
And dried the bright drops from her panting form,
As she with hurried hands once more let down
The golden drapery of her glorious hair,
That fell about her like some royal cloak
Dropped from the sunset's rare and radiant loom.
MARY ASHLEY TOWNSEND.
## p. 16508 (#208) ##########################################
16508
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE HAYMAKERS' SONG
HER
ERE's to him that grows it,
Drink, lads, drink!
That lays it in and mows it,
Clink, jugs, clink!
To him that mows and makes it,
That scatters it and shakes it,
That turns and teds and rakes it,
Clink, jugs, clink!
Now here's to him that stacks it,
Drink, lads, drink!
That thrashes and that tacks it,
Clink, jugs, clink!
That cuts it out for eating,
When March-dropped lambs are bleating,
And the slate-blue clouds are sleeting,
Drink, lads, drink!
And here's to thane and yeoman,
Drink, lads, drink!
To horseman and to bowman,
Clink, jugs, clink!
To lofty and to low man,
Who bears a grudge to no man,
But finches from no foeman,
Drink, lads, drink!
ALFRED AUSTIN.
SEPTEMBER
B.
IRDS that were gray in the green are black in the yellow.
Here where the green remains, rocks one little fellow.
Quaker in gray, do you know that the green is going ?
More than that — do you know that the yellow is showing ?
Singer of songs, do you know that your youth is flying ?
That age will soon at the lock of your life be prying?
Lover of life, do you know that the brown is going ?
More than that — do you know that the gray is showing ?
S. FRANCES HARRISON (“Seranus”).
## p. 16509 (#209) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16509
INDIAN SUMMER
LLC
INGER, O day!
Let not thy purple haze
Fade utterly away.
The Indian summer lays
Her tender touch upon the emerald hills.
Exquisite thrills
Of delicate gladness fill the blue-veined air.
More restful even than rest,
The passionate sweetness that is everywhere.
Soft splendors in the west
Touch with the charm of coming changefulness
The yielding hills.
Oh linger, day!
Let not the dear
Delicious languor of thy dreamfulness
Vanish away!
Serene and clear,
The brooding stillness of the delicate air,
Dreamier than the dreamiest: depths of sleep,
Falls softly everywhere.
Still let me keep
One little hour longer tryst with thee,
O day of days!
Lean down on me,
In tender beauty of thy amethyst haze.
Upon the vine,
Rich clinging clusters of the ripening grape
Hang silent in the sun,
But in each one
Beats with full throb the quickening purple wine,
Whose pulse shall round the perfect fruit to shape.
Too dreamy even to dream,
I hear the murmuring bee and gliding stream;
The singing silence of the afternoon,
Lulling my yielding senses till they swoon
Into still deeper rest:
While soul released from sense,
Passionate and intense,
With quick exultant quiver in its wings,
Prophetic longing for diviner things,
Escapes the unthinking breast;
## p. 16510 (#210) ##########################################
16510
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
Pierces rejoicing through the shining mist,
But shrinks before the keen, cold ether, kissed
By burning stars; delirious foretaste
Of joys the soul — too eager in its haste
To grasp ere won by the diviner right
Of birth through death — is far too weak to bear.
Bathed in earth's lesser light,
Slipping down slowly through the shining air,
Once more it steals into the dreaming breast,
Praying again to be its patient guest.
And as my senses wake,
The beautiful glad soul again to take,
The twilight falls.
A lonely wood-thrush calls
The day away.
«Where hast thou been to-day,
O soul of mine ? » I wondering question her.
She will not answer while the light winds stir
And rustle near to hear what she may say.
Thou needst not linger, day!
My soul and I
Would hold high converse of diviner things.
Unfold thy wings;
Wrap softly round thyself thy delicate haze,
And gliding down the slowly darkening ways,
Vanish away!
ALICE WELLINGTON Rollins.
INDIAN SUMMER
T"
HESE are the days when birds come back,-
A very few, a bird or two, -
To take a backward look.
These are the days when skies put on
The old, old sophistries of June, -
A blue-and-gold mistake.
Oh! fraud that almost cheats the bee,
Almost thy plausibility
Induces my belief;
## p. 16511 (#211) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16511
Till ranks of seeds their witness bear,
And softly through the altered air
Hurries a timid leaf!
Oh, sacrament of summer days!
Oh, last communion in the haze!
Permit a child to join -
Thy sacred emblems to partake,
Thy consecrated bread to break,
Taste thine immortal wine.
EMILY DICKINSON,
NOVEMBER IN THE SOUTH
THIS
his livelong day I listen to the fall
Of hickory-nuts and acorns to the ground,
The croak of rain-crows and the blue-jay's call,
The woodman's axe that hews with muffled sound.
.
And like a spendthrift in a threadbare coat
That still retains a dash of crimson hue,
An old woodpecker chatters forth a note
About the better summer days he knew.
Across the road a ruined cabin stands,
With ragweeds and with thistles at its door,
While withered cypress-vines hang tattered strands
About its falling roof and rotting floor.
In yonder forest nook no sound is heard,
Save when the walnuts patter on the earth,
Or when by winds the hectic leaves are stirred
To dance like witches in their maniac mirth.
Down in the orchard hang the golden pears,
Half honeycombed by yellowhammer beaks ;
Near by, a dwarfed and twisted apple bears
Its fruit, brown-red as Amazonian cheeks.
The lonesome landscape seems as if it yearned
Like our own aching hearts, when first we knew
The one love of our life was not returned,
Or first we found an old-time friend untrue.
## p. 16512 (#212) ##########################################
16512
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
At last the night comes, and the broad white moon
Is welcomed by the owl with frenzied glee;
The fat opossum, like a satyr, soon
Blinks at its light from yon persimmon-tree.
The raccoon starts to hear long-dreaded sounds
Amid his scattered spoils of ripened corn,
The cry of negroes and the yelp of hounds,
The wild rude pealing of a hunter's horn.
At last a gray mist covers all the land
Until we seem to wander in a cloud,
Far, far away upon some elfin strand
Where sorrow drapes us in a mildewed shroud.
No voice is heard in field or forest nigh
To break the desolation of the spell,
Save one sad mocking-bird in boughs near by,
Who sings like Tasso in his madman's cell;
While one magnolia blossom, ghostly white,
Like high-born Leonora, lingering there,
Haughty and splendid in the lonesome night,
Is pale with passion in her dumb despair.
WALTER MALONE.
THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS
'T
WAS the night before Christmas, when all through the
Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse: [house
The stockings were hung by the chimney with care,
In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there;
The children were nestled all snug in their beds,
While visions of sugar-plums danced through their heads;
And mamma in her kerchief, and I in my cap,
Had just settled our brains for a long winter's nap,–
When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter,
I sprang from my bed to see what was the matter.
Away to the window I flew like a flash,
Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash.
The moon, on the breast of the new-fallen snow,
Gave a lustre of midday to objects below;
## p. 16513 (#213) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16513
When what to my wondering eyes should api ear
But a miniature sleigh, and eight tiny reindeer,
With a little old driver, so lively and quick
I knew in a moment it must be St. Nick.
More rapid than eagles his coursers they came,
And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name:
«Now, Dasher! now, Dancer! now, Prancer! now, Vixen!
On, Comet! on, Cupid! on, Dunder and Blitzen!
To the top of the porch, to the top of the wall!
Now dash away, dash away, dash away all! »
As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,
When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky,
So up to the house-top the coursers they flew,
With the sleigh full of toys, and St. Nicholas too.
And then in a twinkling I heard on the roof
The prancing and pawing of each little hoof.
As I drew in my head, and was turning around,
Down the chimney St. Nicholas came with a bound.
He was dressed all in fur from his head to his foot,
And his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot;
A bundle of toys he had fung on his back,
And he looked like a peddler just opening his pack
His eyes how they twinkled! his dimples how merry!
His cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry;
His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow,
And the beard on his chin was as white as the snow.
The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth,
And the smoke, it encircled his head like a wreath.
He had a broad face, and a little round belly
That shook, when he laughed, like a bowlful of jelly.
He was chubby and plump,- a right jolly old elf, -
And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself.
A wink of his eye, and a twist of his head,
Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread.
He spake not a word, but went straight to his work,
And filled all the stockings; then turned with a jerk,
And laying his finger aside of his nose,
And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose.
He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle,
And away they all flew like the down of a thistle;
But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight,
“Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night! ”
CLEMENT CLARKE MOORE.
XXVIII-1033
## p. 16514 (#214) ##########################################
16514
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE FROST
THE
HE Frost looked forth, one still, clear night,
And he said, “Now I shall be out of sight;
So through the valley and over the height
In silence I'll take my way.
I will not go like that blustering train,
The wind and the snow, the hail and the rain,
Who make so much bustle and noise in vain,
But I'll be as busy. as they! ”
Then he went to the mountain, and powdered its crest;
He climbed up the trees, and their boughs he dressed
With diamonds and pearls; and over the breast
Of the quivering lake he spread
A coat of mail, that it need not fear
The downward point of many a spear
That he hung on its margin, far and near,
Where a rock could reach its head.
He went to the windows of those who slept,
And over the pane like a fairy crept:
Wherever he breathed, wherever he stepped,
By the light of the moon were seen
Most beautiful things. There were flowers and trees,
There were bevies of birds and swarms of bees,
There were cities, thrones, temples, and towers, and these
All pictured in silver sheen!
(
But he did one thing that was hardly fair:
He peeped in the cupboard, and finding there
That all had forgotten for him to prepare,-
“Now, just to set them a-thinking,
I'll bite this basket of fruit,” said he;
« This costly pitcher I'll burst in three;
And the glass of water they've left for me
Shall (tchick! ) to tell them I'm drinking. ”
HANNAH FRANCES GOULD.
## p. 16515 (#215) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16515
1
THE ROOT'S DREAM
F
ROM the dark earth cool and fragrant,
A gnarled unlovely root
Sent forth in the rippling sunshine
A slender gold-green shoot.
The shoot in the languid breezes
Was soon by a pale bloom bent;
A sense of its frail white beauty
The sun to the black root sent.
1
The root was thrilled by a vision,
A vision of peace supreme ;-
The fragile star of a blossom
Was the black root's dainty dream.
1
R. K. MUNKITTRICK.
#
WILD HONEY
3
W***
HERE hints of racy sap and gum
Out of the old dark forest come;
Where birds their beaks like hammers wield,
And pith is pierced, and bark is peeled;
Where the green walnut's outer rind
Gives precious bitterness to the wind;-
There lurks the sweet creative power,
As lurks the honey in the flower.
In winter's bud that bursts in spring,
In nut of autumn's ripening,
In acrid bulb beneath the mold,
Sleeps the elixir, strong and old,
E
That Rosicrucians sought in vain,-
Life that renews itself again!
What bottled perfume is so good
As fragrance of split tulip-wood ?
What fabled drink of god or Muse
Was rich as purple mulberry-juice ?
## p. 16516 (#216) ##########################################
16516
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
And what school-polished gem of thought
Is like the rune from Nature caught ?
He is a poet strong and true
Who loves wild thyme and honey-dew;
And like a brown bee works and sings
With morning freshness on his wings,
And a gold burden on his thighs, -
The pollen-dust of centuries!
MAURICE THOMPSON.
THE WAKING OF THE LARK
O
BONNIE bird that in the brake, exultant, does prepare thee -
As poets do whose thoughts are true — for wings that will
upbear thee,
Oh, tell me, tell me, bonnie bird,
Canst thou not pipe of hope deferred ?
Or canst thou sing of naught but spring among the golden meadows?
Methinks a bard (and thou art one) should suit his song to sorrow;
And tell of pain, as well as gain, that waits us on the morrow:
But thou art not a prophet, thou,
If naught but joy can touch thee now;
If, in thy heart, thou hast no vow that speaks of Nature's anguish.
Oh, I have held my sorrows dear, and felt, though poor and slighted,
The songs we love are those we hear when love is unrequited.
But thou art still the slave of dawn,
And canst not sing till night be gone,
Till o'er the pathway of the fawn the sunbeams shine and quiver.
Thou art the minion of the sun that rises in his splendor,
And canst not spare for Dian fair the songs that should attend her:
The moon, so sad and silver pale,
Is mistress of the nightingale;
And thou wilt sing on hill and dale no ditties in the darkness.
For queen and king thou wilt not spare one note of thine outpouring;
And thou'rt as free as breezes be on Nature's velvet flooring :
The daisy, with its hood undone,
The grass, the sunlight, and the sun
These are the joys, thou holy one, that pay thee for thy singing.
## p. 16517 (#217) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16517
Oh, hush! Oh, hush! how wild a gush of rapture in the distance -
A roll of rhymes, a toll of chimes, a cry for love's assistance;
A sound that wells from happy throats,
A flood of song where beauty foats,
And where our thoughts, like golden boats, do seem to cross a river.
This is the advent of the lark,– the priest in gray apparel, -
Who doth prepare to trill in air his sinless summer carol;
This is the prelude to the lay
The birds did sing in Cæsar's day,
And will again, for aye and aye, in praise of God's creation.
O dainty thing, on wonder's wing, by life and love elated,
Oh, sing aloud from cloud to cloud, till day be consecrated;
Till from the gateways of the morn,
The sun, with all his light unshorn,
His robes of darkness round him torn, doth scale the lofty heavens!
ERIC MACKAY.
TO THE LARK
(T'R EHEDYDD)
S
ENTINEL of the morning light!
Reveler of the spring!
How sweetly, nobly wild thy flight,
Thy boundless journeying:
Far from thy brethren of the woods, alone,
A hermit chorister before God's throne !
Oh! wilt thou climb yon heavens for me,
Yon rampart's starry height,
Thou interlude of melody
'Twixt darkness and the light,
And seek with heaven's first dawn upon thy crest.
My lady-love, the moonbeam of the west ?
No woodland caroler art thou;
Far from the archer's eye,
Thy course is o'er the mountain's brow,
Thy music in the sky:
Then fearless float thy path of cloud along,
Thou earthly denizen of angel song.
DAFYDD AP GWILYM.
(Welsh, Fourteenth Century. )
## p. 16518 (#218) ##########################################
16518
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
MEADOW-LARKS
S)
WEET, sweet, sweet! Oh happy that I am!
(Listen to the meadow-larks, across the fields that sing ! )
Sweet, sweet, sweet! O subtle breath of balm,
O winds that blow, O buds that grow, O rapture of the
spring!
Sweet, sweet, sweet! O skies, serene and blue,
That shut the velvet pastures in, that fold the mountain's
crest!
Sweet, sweet, sweet! What of the clouds ye knew?
The vessels ride a golden tide, upon a sea at rest.
Sweet, sweet, sweet! Who prates of care and pain ?
Who says that life is sorrowful? O life so glad, so fleet!
Ah! he who lives the noblest life finds life the noblest gain,
The tears of pain a tender rain to make its waters sweet.
Sweet, sweet, sweet! O happy world that is!
Dear heart, I hear across the fields my mateling pipe and call.
Sweet, sweet, sweet! Oworld so full of bliss, –
For life is love, the world is love, and love is over all!
INA D. COOLBRITH.
MORNING SONG
T"
He lark now leaves his watery nest,
And climbing shakes his dewy wings:
He takes this window for the east;
And to implore your light, he sings.
Awake, awake! the morn will never rise,
Till she can dress her beauty at your eyes.
The merchant bows unto the seaman's star,
The plowman from the sun his season takes,
But still the lover wonders what they are
Who look for day before his mistress wakes. ·
Awake, awake, break through your veils of lawn,
Then draw your curtains, and begin the dawn.
SIR WILLIAM DAVENANT.
## p. 16519 (#219) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16519
THE O’LINCON FAMILY
A
FLOCK of merry singing-birds was sporting in the grove;
Some were warbling cheerily, and some were making love:
There were Bobolincon, Wadolincon, Winterseeble, Conquedle,-
A livelier set was never led by tabor, pipe, or fiddle, -
Crying, Phew, shew, Wadolincon, see, see, Bobolincon,
Down among the tickletops, hiding in the buttercups!
I know the saucy chap, I see his shining cap
Bobbing in the clover there,- see, see, see! ”
Up flies Bobolincon, perching on an apple-tree,
Startled by his rival's song, quickened by his raillery;
Soon he spies the rogue afloat, curvetting in the air,
And merrily he turns about, and warns him to beware!
« 'Tis you that would a-wooing go, down among the rushes O!
But wait a week, till flowers are cheery,— wait a week, and ere you
marry,
Be sure of a house wherein to tarry!
Wadolink, Whiskodink, Tom Denny, wait, wait, wait! »
Every one's a funny fellow; every one's a little mellow:
Follow, follow, follow, follow, o'er the hill and in the hollow!
Merrily, merrily, there they hie; now they rise and now they fly;
They cross and turn, and in and out, and down in the middle, and
wheel about,-
With a
Phew, shew, Wadolincon! listen to me, Bobolincon!
Happy's the wooing that's speedily doing, that's speedily doing,
That's merry and over with the bloom of the clover!
Bobolincon, Wadolincon, Winterseeble, follow, follow me! »
Oh what a happy life they lead, over the hill and in the mead!
Now they gambol o'er the clearing - off again, and then appearing;
How they sing, and how they play! see, they fly away, away!
Poised aloft on quivering wing, now they soar, and now they sing:
“We inust all be merry and moving; we must all be happy and
loving;
For when the midsummer has come, and the grain has ripened its
ear,
The haymakers scatter our young, and we mourn for the rest of the
year.
Then, Bobolincon, Wadolincon, Winterseeble, haste, haste away! )
WILSON FLAGG.
## p. 16520 (#220) ##########################################
16520
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
TO THE WOOD-ROBIN
THE
He wooing air is jubilant with song,
And blossoms swell
As leaps thy liquid melody along
The dusky dell,
Where Silence, late supreme, foregoes her wonted spell.
Ah, whence, in sylvan solitudes remote,
Hast learned the lore
That breeds delight in every echoing note
The woodlands o'er;
As when, through slanting sun, descends the quickening
shower?
Thy hermitage is peopled with the dreams
That gladden sleep:
Here Fancy dallies with delirious themes
Mid shadows deep,
Till eyes unused to tears, with wild emotions weep.
We rise, alas, to find our visions fled!
But thine remain.
Night weaves of golden harmonies the thread,
And fills thy brain
With joys that overflow in Love's awakening strain.
Yet thou, from mortal influence apart,
Seek'st naught of praise;
The empty plaudits of the emptier heart
Taint not thy lays:
Thy Maker's smile alone thy tuneful bosom sways.
Teach me, thou warbling eremite, to sing
Thy rhapsody:
Nor borne on vain ambition's vaunting wing,
But led of thee,
To rise from earthly dreams to hymn Eternity.
JOHN B. TABB.
## p. 16521 (#221) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16521
THE THRUSH'S SONG
(FROM THE GAELIC)
D
EAR, dear, dear,
In the rocky glen,
Far away, far away, far away,
The haunts of men:
There shall we dwell in love
With the lark and the dove,
Cuckoo and corn-rail;
Feast on the bearded snail,
Worm and gilded fly;
Drink of the crystal rill
Winding adown the hill
Never to dry.
With glee, with glee, with glee,
Cheer up, cheer up, cheer up here;
Nothing to harm us, then sing merrily,
Sing to the loved one whose nest is near.
Qui, qui, queen, quip,
Tiurru, tiurru, chipiwi;
Too-tee, too-tee, chin-choo,
Chirri, chirri, chooce,
Quin, qui, qui!
W. MACGILLIVRAY.
THE SONG OF THE THRUSH
I
WAS on the margin of a plain,
Under a wide-spreading tree,
Hearing the song
Of the wild birds;
Listening to the language
Of the thrush cock,
Who from the wood of the valley
Composed a verse;
From the wood of the steep
He sang exquisitely.
Speckled was his breast
Amongst the green leaves,
As upon branches
Of a thousand blossoms
## p. 16522 (#222) ##########################################
16522
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
1
On the bank of a brook,
All heard
With the dawn the song,
Like a silver bell;
Performing a sacrifice
Until the hour of forenoon;
Upon the green altar
Ministering Bardism.
From the branches of the hazel
Of green broad leaves
He sings an ode
To God the Creator:
With a carol of love
From the green glade
To all in the hollow
Of the glen who love him;
Balm of the heart
To those who love.
I had from his beak
The voice of inspiration,
A song of metres
That gratified me;
Glad was I made
By his minstrelsy.
Then respectfully
Uttered I an address
From the stream of the valley
To the bird:
I requested urgently
His undertaking a message
To the fair one
Where dwells my affection.
Gone is the bard of the leaves
From the small twigs
To the second Lunet,
The sun of the maidens!
To the streams of the plain
St. Mary prosper him,
To bring to me,
Under the green woods
The hue of the snow of one night,
Without delay.
Rhys Goch AP RHICCART (Welsh).
## p. 16523 (#223) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16523
THE SERVICE OF SONG
SOM
OME keep the Sabbath going to church:
I keep it staying at home,
With a bobolink for a chorister
And an orchard for a dome.
Some keep the Sabbath in surplice:
I just wear my wings;
And instead of tolling the bell for church,
Our little sexton sings.
God preaches, a noted clergyman,
And the sermon is never long;
So instead of getting to heaven at last,
I'm going all along !
EMILY DICKINSON.
EARLY SPRING
O
TREES, all a-throb and a-quiver
With the stirring pulse of the spring,
Your tops so misty against the blue,
With the buds where the green not yet looks through,
I know the beauty the days will bring,
But your cloudy tops are a wonderful thing!
Like the first faint streak of the dawning,
Which tells that the day is nigh;
Like the first dear kiss of the maiden,
So absolute, though so shy;
Like the joy divine of the mother
Before her child she sees —
So faint, so dear, and so blessed
Are your misty tops, 0 trees!
I can feel the delicate pulses
That stir in each restless fold
Of leaflets and bunches of blossoms
The life that never grows old:
Yet wait, ah wait, though they woo you —
The sun, the rain-drops, the breeze;
Break not too soon into verdure,
O misty, beautiful trees!
ANNA CALLENDER BRACKETT.
## p. 16524 (#224) ##########################################
16524
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
TO A DAISY
AM!
h! I'm feared thou's come too sooin,
Little daisy !
Pray whativer wor ta doin'?
Are ta crazy ?
Winter winds are blowin' yet:
Tha'll be starved, mi little pet!
Did a gleam o' sunshine warm thee,
An' deceive thee?
Niver let appearance charm thee:
Yes, believe me,
Smiles tha'lt find are oft but snares
Laid to catch thee unawares.
An' yet, I think it looks a shame
To talk such stuff;
I've lost heart, an' thou'lt do t' same,
Ay, sooin enough!
An', if thou’rt happy as tha art,
Trustin' must be twisest part.
Come! I'll pile some bits o' stoan
Round thi dwellin';
They may cheer thee when I've goan, -
Theer's no tellin':
An' when spring's mild day draws near,
I'll release thee, niver fear!
An' if then thi pretty face
Greets me smilin',
I may come an' sit by th' place,
Time beguilin';
Glad to think I'd paar to be
Of some use, if but to thee!
JOHN HARTLEY.
BACCHUS
ISTEN to the tawny thief,
Hid behind the waxen leaf,
Growling at his fairy host, -
Bidding her with angry boast
L
## p. 16525 (#225) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16525
Fill his cup with wine distilled
From the dew the dawn has spilled :
Stored away in golden casks
Is the precious draught he asks.
Who — who makes this mimic din
In this mimic meadow inn,
Sings in such a drowsy note,
Wears a golden-belted coat;
Loiters in the dainty room
Of this tavern of perfume;
Dares to linger at the cup
Till the yellow sun is up?
1
1
Bacchus 'tis, come back again
To the busy haunts of men;
Garlanded and gayly dressed,
Bands of gold about his breast;
Straying from his paradise,
Having pinions angel-wise. -
'Tis the honey-bee, who goes
Reveling within a rose!
FRANK DEMPSTER SHERMAN.
SPRING
From (Summer's Last Will and Testament)
S"
PRING, the sweet Spring, is the year's pleasant king:
Then blooms each thing, then maids dance in a ring;
Cold doth not sting, the pretty birds do sing –
Cuckoo, jug, jug, pu we, to witta woo.
The palm and may make country-houses gay;
Lambs frisk and play, the shepherds pipe all day;
And we hear aye birds tune this merry lay -
Cuckoo, jug, jug, pu we, to witta woo.
The fields breathe sweet, the daisies kiss our feet;
Young lovers meet, old wives a-sunning sit;
In every street these tunes our ears do greet -
Cuckoo, jug, jug, pu we, to witta woo.
Spring, the sweet Spring.
THOMAS NASH.
## p. 16526 (#226) ##########################################
16526
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE APPLE-TREE
From Poems) by Julia C. R. Dorr. Copyright 1874, 1885, 1892, by Charles
Scribner's Sons
G
RACEFUL and lithe and tall,
It stands by the garden wall,
In the flush of its pink-white bloom
Elate with its own perfume,
Tossing its young bright head
In the first glad joy of May,
While its singing leaves sing back
To the bird on the dancing spray.
“I'm alive! I'm abloom ! » it cries
To the winds and the laughing skies.
Ho! for the gay young apple-tree
That stands by the garden wall!
Sturdy and broad and tall,
Over the garden wall
It spreads its branches wide –
A bower on either side.
For the bending boughs hang low;
And with shouts and gay turmoil
The children gather like bees
To garner the golden spoil;
While the smiling mother sings,
Rejoice for the gift it brings!
Ho! for the laden apple-tree
That stands by our garden wall! »
The strong swift years fly past,
Each swifter than the last;
And the tree by the garden wall
Sees joy and grief befall.
Still from the spreading boughs
Some golden apples swing;
But the children come no more
For the autumn harvesting.
The tangled grass lies deep
Where the long path used to creep:
Yet ho! for the brave old apple-tree
That leans over the crumbling wall!
New generations pass,
Like shadows on the grass.
## p. 16527 (#227) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16527
What is there that remains
For all their toil and pains ?
A little hollow place
Where once a hearthstone lay;
An empty, silent space
Whence life hath gone away;
Tall brambles where the lilacs grew,
Some fennel, and a clump of rue,
And this one gnarled old apple-tree
Where once was the garden wall!
JULIA C. R. DORR.
THE HOUSE OF THE TREES
O"
PE your doors and take me in,
Spirit of the wood;
Wash me clean of dust and din,
Clothe me in your mood.
Take me from the noisy light
To the sunless peace,
Where at midday standeth Night,
Signing Toil's release.
All your dusky twilight stores
To my senses give;
Take me in and lock the doors,
Show me how to live.
Lift your leafy roof for me,
Part your yielding walls;
Let me wander lingeringly
Through your scented halls.
Ope your doors and take me in,
Spirit of the wood;
Take me- make me next of kin
To your leafy brood.
ETHELWYN WETHERALD.
## p. 16528 (#228) ##########################################
16528
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
IN GREEN OLD GARDENS
IN
N GREEN old gardens hidden away
From sight of revel and sound of strife,
Where the bird may sing out his soul ere he dies,
Nor fears for the night, so he lives his day;
Where the high red walls, which are growing gray
With their lichen and moss embroideries,
Seem sadly and sternl to shut out Life,
Because it is often as sad as they;
Where even the bee has time to glide
(Gathering gayly his honeyed store)
Right to the heart of the old-world flowers,
China-asters and purple stocks,
Dahlias and tall red hollyhocks,
Laburnums raining their golden showers,
Columbines prim of the folded core,
And lupins, and larkspurs, and "London pride”;
Where the heron is waiting amongst the reeds,
Grown tame in the silence that reigns around,
Broken only, now and then,
By shy woodpecker or noisy jay,
By the far-off watch-dog's muffled bay;
But where never the purposeless laughter of men,
Or the seething city's murmurous sound,
Will float up under the river-weeds;
Here may I live what life I please,
Married and buried out of sight,-
Married to pleasure, and buried to pain,-
Hidden away amongst scenes like these,
Under the fans of the chestnut-trees;
Living my child-life over again,
With the further hope of a fuller delight,
Blithe as the birds and wise as the bees.
In green old gardens hidden away
From sight of revel and sound of strife, -
Here have I leisure to breathe and move,
And to do my work in a nobler way;
To sing my songs, and to say my say;
## p. 16529 (#229) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16529
To dream my dreams, and to love my love;
To hold my faith, and to live my life,
Making the most of its shadowy day.
« VIOLET FANE” (Lady Currie).
A BENEDICTINE GARDEN
Thr
HROUGH all the wind-blown aisles of May
Faint bells of perfume swing and fall.
Within this apple-petaled wall
(A gray east flecked with rosy day)
The pink Laburnum lays her cheek
In married, matchless, lovely bliss,
Against her golden mate, to seek
His airy kiss.
Tulips, in faded splendor drest,
Brood o'er their beds, a slumbrous gloom;
Dame Peony, red and ripe with bloom,
Swells the silk housing of her breast;
The Lilac, drunk to ecstasy,
Breaks her full flagons on the air,
And drenches home the reeling bee
Who found her fair.
O cowlèd legion of the Cross,
What solemn pleasantry is thine,
Vowing to seek the life divine
Through abnegation and through loss!
Men but make monuments of sin
Who walk the earth's ambitious round;
Thou hast the richer realm within
This garden ground.
No woman's voice hath sweeter note
Than chanting of this plumèd choir;
No jewel ever wore the fire
Hung on the dewdrop's quivering throat.
A ruddier pomp and pageantry
Than world's delight o'erfleets thy sod;
And choosing this, thou hast in fee
The peace of God.
ALICE BROWN.
XXVIII-1034
## p. 16530 (#230) ##########################################
16530
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE BLACKBERRY FARM
NT
ATURE gives with freèst hands
Richest gifts to poorest lands.
When the lord has sown his last,
And his field's to desert passed,
She begins to claim her own,
And instead of harvest flown-
Sunburnt sheaves and golden ears —
Sends her hardier pioneers:
Barbarous brambles, outlawed seeds;
The first families of weeds
Fearing neither sun nor wind,
With the flowers of their kind
(Outcasts of the garden-bound),
Colonize the expended ground,
Using (none her right gainsay)
Confiscations of decay:
Thus she clothes the barren place,
Old disgrace, with newer grace.
)
Title-deeds, which cover lands
Ruled and reaped by buried hands,
She — disowning owners old,
Scorning their “to have and hold”.
Takes herself: the moldering fence
Hides with her munificence;
O'er the crumbled gate-post twines
Her proprietary vines;
On the doorstep of the house
Writes in moss Anonymous,”
And, that beast and bird may see,
« This is Public Property;"
To the bramble makes the sun
Bearer of profusion;
Blossom-odors breathe in June
Promise of her later boon,
And in August's brazen heat
Grows the prophecy complete ;-
Lo, her largess glistens bright,
Blackness diamonded with light!
C
Then, behold, she welcomes all
To her annual festival:
## p. 16531 (#231) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16531
Mine the fruit, but yours as well,”
Speaks the Mother Miracle;
«Rich and poor are welcome; come,
Make to-day millennium
In my garden of the sun:
Black and white to me are one.
This my freehold use content,-
Here no landlord rides for rent;
I proclaim my jubilee,
In my Black Republic, free.
Come,” she beckons; “enter, through
Gates of gossamer, doors of dew
(Lit with summer's tropic fire),
My Liberia of the brier. »
JOHN JAMES PIATT.
FROM A POEM ON THOREAU
I
F I could find that little poem,
With the daintiest sort of proem,
Which the poet squirrel made
On a leaf that would not fade,
And slyly hid, one darksome night,
By the wicked glow-worm's light!
It was all about Thoreau-
How the squirrels loved him so;
Since, whenever he went walking,
He would stop to hear them talking,-
Often smiling when they chattered,
Or their brown nuts downward pattered:
Nay, could I but find that bird
Who told me once that she had heard
Robins, wrens, and others tell
How he knew their language well,
And how he turned, a thousand times,
Birdic into English rhymes!
H. A. BLOOD.
## p. 16532 (#232) ##########################################
16532
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE SOUTH
N
IGHT; and beneath star-blazoned summer skies
Behold the spirit of the musky South,-
A creole, with still-burning, languid eyes,
Voluptuous limbs and incense-breathing mouth:
Swathed in spun gauze is she,
From fibres of her own anana tree.
Within these sumptuous woods she lies at ease,
By rich night-breezes, dewy cool, caressed:
'Twixt cypresses and slim palmetto-trees,
Like to the golden oriole's hanging nest,
Her airy hammock swings,
And through the dark her mocking-bird yet sings.
How beautiful she is! A tulip-wreath
Twines round her shadowy, free-floating hair:
Young, weary, passionate, and sad as death,
Dark visions haunt for her the vacant air,
While movelessly she lies
With lithe, lax, folded hands and heavy eyes.
Full well knows she how wide and fair extend
Her groves bright-flowered, her tangled everglades,
Majestic streams that indolently wend
Through lush savanna or dense forest shades,
Where the brown buzzard flies
To broad bayous 'neath hazy-golden skies.
Hers is the savage splendor of the swamp,
With pomp of scarlet and of purple bloom;
Where blow warm, furtive breezes faint and damp,
Strange insects whir, and stalking bitterns boom
Where from stale waters dead
Oft looms the great-jawed alligator's head.
Her wealth, her beauty, and the blight on these,
Of all she is aware: luxuriant woods,
Fresh, living, sunlit, in her dream she sees;
And ever midst those verdant solitudes
The soldier's wooden cross,
O'ergrown by creeping tendrils and rank moss.
Was hers a dream of empire ?
