Kostenlos

Undertones

Text
0
Kritiken
Als gelesen kennzeichnen
Schriftart:Kleiner AaGrößer Aa

Madison J. Cawein

Undertones

INSCRIBED TO THE PATHETIC

MEMORY OF THE POET

HENRY TIMROD



Long are the days, and three times long the nights.

The weary hours are a heavy chain

Upon the feet of all Earth's dear delights,

Holding them ever prisoners to pain.

What shall beguile me to believe again

In hope, that faith within her parable writes

Of life, care reads with eyes whose tear-drops stain?

Shall such assist me to subdue the heights?

Long is the night, and over long the day. —

The burden of all being! – is it worse

Or better, lo! that they who toil and pray

May win not more than they who toil and curse?

A little sleep, a little love, ah me!

And the slow weigh up the soul's Calvary!



THE DREAMER



Even as a child he loved to thrid the bowers,

And mark the loafing sunlight's lazy laugh;

Or, on each season, spell the epitaph

Of its dead months repeated in their flowers;

Or list the music of the strolling showers,

Whose vagabond notes strummed through a twinkling staff;

Or read the day's delivered monograph

Through all the chapters of its dædal hours.

Still with the same child-faith and child-regard

He looks on Nature, hearing, at her heart,

The beautiful beat out the time and place,

Whereby no lesson of this life is hard,

No struggle vain of science or of art,

That dies with failure written on its face.



QUIET



A log-hut in the solitude,

A clapboard roof to rest beneath!

This side, the shadow-haunted wood;

That side, the sunlight-haunted heath.





At daybreak Morn shall come to me

In raiment of the white winds spun;

Slim in her rosy hand the key

That opes the gateway of the sun.





Her smile shall help my heart enough

With love to labor all the day,

And cheer the road, whose rocks are rough,

With her smooth footprints, each a ray.





At dusk a voice shall call afar,

A lone voice like the whippoorwill's;

And, on her shimmering brow one star,

Night shall descend the western hills.





She at my door till dawn shall stand,

With Gothic eyes, that, dark and deep,

Are mirrors of a mystic land,

Fantastic with the towns of sleep.



UNQUALIFIED



Not his the part to win the goal,

The flaming goal that flies before,

Into whose course the apples roll

Of self that stay his feet the more.





Beyond himself he shall not win

Whose flesh is as a driven dust,

That his own soul must wander in,

Seeing no farther than his lust.



UNENCOURAGED ASPIRATION



Is mine the part of no companion hand

Of help, except my shadow's silent self?

A moonlight traveller in Fancy's land

Of leering gnome and hollow-laughing elf;





Whose forests deepen and whose moon goes down,

When Night's blind shadow shall usurp my own;

And, mid the dust and wreck of some old town,

The City of Dreams, I grope and fall alone.



THE WOOD

<div