Rose and Roof-Tree | Page 3

George Parsons Lathrop
cool,?And the meadow's trampled acres.?But hark, how fresh the song of the winged music-makers!?For now the moanings bitter,?Left by the rain, make harmony?With the swallow's matin-twitter,?And the robin's note, like the wind's in a tree:?The infant morning breathes sweet breath,?And with it is blent?The wistful, wild, moist scent?Of the grass in the marsh which the sea nourisheth:?And behold!?The last reluctant drop of the storm,?Wrung from the roof, is smitten warm?And turned to gold;?For in its veins doth run?The very blood of the bold, unsullied sun!
THE SONG-SPARROW.
Glimmers gray the leafless thicket?Close beside my garden gate,?Where, so light, from post to picket?Hops the sparrow, blithe, sedate;?Who, with meekly folded wing,?Comes to sun himself and sing.
It was there, perhaps, last year,?That his little house he built;?For he seems to perk and peer,?And to twitter, too, and tilt?The bare branches in between,?With a fond, familiar mien.
Once, I know, there was a nest,?Held there by the sideward thrust?Of those twigs that touch his breast;?Though 'tis gone now. Some rude gust?Caught it, over-full of snow,--?Bent the bush,--and robbed it so
Thus our highest holds are lost,?By the ruthless winter's wind,?When, with swift-dismantling frost,?The green woods we dwelt in, thinn'd?Of their leafage, grow too cold?For frail hopes of summer's mold.
But if we, with spring-days mellow,?Wake to woeful wrecks of change,?And the sparrow's ritornello?Scaling still its old sweet range;?Can we do a better thing?Than, with him, still build and sing?
Oh, my sparrow, thou dost breed?Thought in me beyond all telling;?Shootest through me sunlight, seed,?And fruitful blessing, with that welling?Ripple of ecstatic rest,?Gurgling ever from thy breast!
And thy breezy carol spurs?Vital motion in my blood,?Such as in the sapwood stirs,?Swells and shapes the pointed bud
Of the lilac; and besets?The hollows thick with violets.
Yet I know not any charm?That can make the fleeting time?Of thy sylvan, faint alarm?Suit itself to human rhyme:?And my yearning rhythmic word,?Does thee grievous wrong, dear bird.
So, however thou hast wrought?This wild joy on heart and brain,?It is better left untaught.?Take thou up the song again:?There is nothing sad afloat?On the tide that swells thy throat!
FAIRHAVEN BAY.
I push on through the shaggy wood,?I round the hill: 't is here it stood;?And there, beyond the crumbled walls,?The shining Concord slowly crawls,
Yet seems to make a passing stay,?And gently spreads its lilied bay,?Curbed by this green and reedy shore,?Up toward the ancient homestead's door.
But dumbly sits the shattered house,?And makes no answer: man and mouse?Long since forsook it, and decay?Chokes its deep heart with ashes gray.
On what was once a garden-ground?Dull red-bloomed sorrels now abound;?And boldly whistles the shy quail?Within the vacant pasture's pale.
Ah, strange and savage, where he shines,?The sun seems staring through those pines?That once the vanished home could bless?With intimate, sweet loneliness.
The ignorant, elastic sod?The feet of them that daily trod?Its roods hath utterly forgot:?The very fire-place knows them not.
For, in the weedy cellar, thick?The ruined chimney's mass of brick?Lies strown. Wide heaven, with such an ease?Dost thou, too, lose the thought of these?
Yet I, although I know not who?Lived here, in years that voiceless grew?Ere I was born,--and never can,--?Am moved, because I am a man.
Oh glorious gift of brotherhood!?Oh sweet elixir in the blood,?That makes us live with those long dead,?Or hope for those that shall be bred
Hereafter! No regret can rob?My heart of this delicious throb;?No thought of fortunes haply wrecked,?Nor pang for nature's wild neglect.
And, though the hearth be cracked and cold,?Though ruin all the place enfold,?These ashes that have lost their name?Shall warm my life with lasting flame!
CHANT FOR AUTUMN.
Veiled in visionary haze,?Behold, the ethereal autumn days?Draw near again!?In broad array,?With a low, laborious hum?These ministers of plenty come,?That seem to linger, while they steal away.
O strange, sweet charm?Of peaceful pain,?When yonder mountain's bended arm?Seems wafting o'er the harvest-plain?A message to the heart that grieves,?And round us, here, a sad-hued rain?Of leaves that loosen without number?Showering falls in yellow, umber,?Red, or russet, 'thwart the stream!?Now pale Sorrow shall encumber?All too soon these lands, I deem;
Yet who at heart believes?The autumn, a false friend,?Can bring us fatal harm??Ah, mist-hung avenues in dream?Not more uncertainly extend
Than the season that receives?A summer's latest gleam!
But the days of death advance:?They tarry not, nor turn!?I will gather the ashes of summer?In my heart, as an urn.
Oh draw thou nearer,?Thou?Spirit of the distant height,?Whither now that slender flight?Of swallows, winging, guides my sight!
The hill cloth seem to me?A fading memory
Of long delight,?And in its distant blue?Half hideth from my view?This shrinking season that must now retire;?And so shall hold it, hopeful, a desire?And knowledge old as night and always new.?Draw nigher! And, with bended brow,?I will be thy reverer?Through the long winter's term!
So, when the snows hold firm,
And the brook is dumb;?When sharp winds come?To flay the hill-tops bleak,?And whistle down the creek;?While the unhappy worm?Crawls deeper down into the ground,?To 'scape Frost's jailer on his round;
Thy
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