The Poetry Corner

A Southern Girl.

By Madison Julius Cawein

Serious but smiling, stately and serene, And dreamier than a flower; A girl in whom all sympathies convene As perfumes in a bower; Through whom one feels what soul and heart may mean, And their resistless power. Eyes, that commune with the frank skies of truth, Where thought like starlight curls; Lips of immortal rose, where love and youth Nestle like two sweet pearls; Hair, that suggests the Bible braids of RUTH, Deeper than any girl's. When first I saw you, 't was as if within My soul took shape some song - Played by a master of the violin - A music pure and strong, That rapt my soul above all earthly sin To heights that know no wrong.