The Poetry Corner

At The Fall Of Dew

By Madison Julius Cawein

One bright star in the firmament, One wild rose in the dew, And a girl, like the sparkling two, Following the cows that went Through roses wet with dew, Roses, two by two. Shy she was as the twilight skies When they hesitate with stars, As she stood to wait at the pasture bars, Gazing with far-off eyes At the slowly coming stars Over the pasture bars. She hummed a tune while the cattle passed, And the bells in the dusk clanged clear; Then a whistle caught her ear, And she knew 'twas love at last, While the bells in the dusk clanged clear, And his whistle caught her ear. The smell of the hay came warm and sweet From the field there where he stood, The field by the old beech wood, Where a bird sang, "Sweet! oh, sweet!" In the tree there, where he stood By the old beech wood. Then a voice at the farmyard gate Called to her down the road, Where the fireflies' lights were sowed; But she answered the one await By the tree at the end of the road Where the fireflies' lights were sowed. Right young was he and brown and strong As a farmer's lad should be; And she? with her soul of witchery And a heart, like a bird's, of song, All a country girl should be, With a soul of' witchery. Oh! I can see them yet In the dusk of the long-ago Two lovers walking slow; And my eyes with tears are wet For the love of the long-ago, Love of the long-ago.