Читать книгу A Voice on the Wind, and Other Poems - Cawein Madison Julius - Страница 7

TO THE LEAF-CRICKET

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I

Small twilight singer

Of dew and mist: thou ghost-gray, gossamer winger

Of dusk's dim glimmer,

How cool thy note sounds; how thy wings of shimmer

Vibrate, soft-sighing,

Meseems, for Summer that is dead or dying.

I stand and listen,

And at thy song the garden-beds, that glisten

With rose and lily,

Seem touched with sadness; and the tuberose chilly,

Breathing around its cold and colorless breath,

Fills the pale evening with wan hints of death.


II

I see thee quaintly

Beneath the leaf; thy shell-shaped winglets faintly —

As thin as spangle

Of cobwebbed rain – held up at airy angle;

I hear thy tinkle,

Thy fairy notes, the silvery stillness sprinkle;

Investing wholly

The moonlight with divinest melancholy:

Until, in seeming,

I see the Spirit of the Summer dreaming

Amid her ripened orchards, apple-strewn,

Her great, grave eyes fixed on the harvest-moon.


III

As dew-drops beady,

As mist minute, thy notes ring low and reedy:

The vaguest vapor

Of melody, now near; now, like some taper

Of sound, far fading —

Thou will-o'-wisp of music aye evading.

Among the bowers,

The fog-washed stalks of Autumn's weeds and flowers,

By hill and hollow,

I hear thy murmur and in vain I follow —

Thou jack-o'-lantern voice, thou elfin cry,

Thou dirge, that tellest Beauty she must die.


IV

And when the frantic

Wild winds of Autumn with the dead leaves antic;

And walnuts scatter

The mire of lanes; and dropping acorns patter

In grove and forest,

Like some frail grief, with the rude blast thou warrest,

Sending thy slender

Far cry against the gale, that, rough, untender,

Untouched of sorrow,

Sweeps thee aside, where, haply, I to-morrow

Shall find thee lying, tiny, cold and crushed,

Thy weak wings folded and thy music hushed.


A Voice on the Wind, and Other Poems

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