The Poetry Corner

God's Green Book

By Madison Julius Cawein

I. Out, out in the open fields, Where the great, green book of God, The book that its wisdom yields To each soul that is not a clod, Lies wide for the world to read, I would go; and in flower and weed, That letter the lines of the grass, Would read of a better creed Than that which the town-world has. II. Too long in the city streets, The alleys of grime and sin, Have I heard the iron beats Of the heart of toil; whose din And the throb of whose wild unrest Have stunned the song in my breast, Have marred its music and slain The bird that was once its guest, And my soul would find it again. III. Out there where the great, green book, Whose leaves are the grass and trees, Lies open; where each may look, May muse and read as he please; The book, that is gilt with gleams, Whose pages are ribboned with streams; That says what our souls would say Of beauty that 's wrought of dreams And buds and blossoms of May.