The Poetry Corner

In Solitary Places

By Madison Julius Cawein

I. The hurl and hurry of the winds of March, That tore the ash and bowed the pine and larch, Are past and done with: winds, that trampled through The forests with enormous, scythe-like sweep, And from the darkening deep, The battlements of heaven, thunder-blue, Rumbled the arch, The rocking arch of all the booming oaks, With stormy chariot-spokes; Chariots from which wild bugle-blasts they blew, Their warrior challenge.. .Now the wind flower sweet Misses the fury of their ruining feet, The trumpet-thunder of resistless flight, Crashing and vast, obliterating light; Sweeping the skeleton cohorts down Of last year's leaves; and, overhead, Hurrying the giant foliage of night, Gaunt clouds that streamed with tempest. Now each crown Of woods that stooped to clamor of their tread, The frenzy of their passage, stoops no more, Hearing no more their clarion-command, Their chariot-hurl and the wild whip in hand. No more, no more, The forests rock and roar And tumult with their shoutings.. .Hushed and still Is the green-gleaming and the sunlit hill, Along whose sides, Flushing the dewy moss and rainy grass Beneath the topaz-tinted sassafras, As aromatic as some orient wine The violet fire of the bluet glides, The amaranthine flame Glints of the bluebell; and the celandine, Line upon lovely line, Deliberate goldens into birth; And, ruby and rose, the moccasin-flower hides: Innumerable blooms, with which she writes her name, April, upon the page, The winter-withered parchment of old Earth, Her fragrant autograph that gives it worth And loveliness that takes away its age. II. Here where the woods are wet, The blossoms of the dog's-tooth violet Seem meteors in a miniature firmament Of wildflowers, where, with rainy sound and scent Of breeze and blossom, soft the April went: Their tongue-like leaves of umber-mottled green, So thickly seen, Seem dropping words of gold, The visible syllables of a magic old. Beside them, near the wahoo-bush and haw, Blooms the hepatica; Its slender flowers upon swaying stems Lifting pale, solitary blooms, Starry, and twilight-colored, like frail gems, That star the diadems Of sylvan spirits, piercing pale the glooms; Or like the wands, the torches of the fays, That light lone, woodland ways With slim, uncertain rays: (The faery people, whom no eye may see, Busy, so legend says, With budding bough and leafing tree, The blossom's heart o' honey and honey-sack o' the bee, And all dim thoughts and dreams, That take the form of flowers, as it seems, And haunt the banks of greenwood streams, Showing in every line and curve, Commensurate with our love, and intimacy, A smiling confidence or sweet reserve.) There at that leafy turn Of trailered rocks, rise fronds of hart's-tongue fern: Fronds that my fancy names Uncoiling flames Of feathering emerald and gold, That, kindled in the musky mould, Now, stealthily as the morn, unfold Their cool green fires that burn Uneagerly, and spread around An elfin light above the ground, Like that green glow A spirit, lamped with crystal, makes below In dripping caves of labyrinthine moss. And in the underwoods, around them, toss The white-hearts with their penciled leaves, That 'mid the shifting gleams and glooms, The interchanging shine and shade, Seem some vague garment made By unseen hands that weave, that none perceives; Pale hands that work invisible looms, Now dropping shreds of light, Now shadow-shreds, that interbraid And form faint colors mixed with frail perfumes. Or, are they fragments left in flight, These flowers that scatter every glade With windy, beckoning white, And breezy blowing blue, Of her wild gown that shone upon my sight, A moment, in the woods I wandered through? April's, whom still I follow, Whom still my dreams pursue; Who leads me on by many a tangled clue Of loveliness, until, in some green hollow, Born of her fragrance and her melody, But lovelier than herself and happier, too, Cradled in blossoms of the dogwood-tree, My soul shall see White as a sunbeam in the heart of day The infant, May. III. Up, up, my Heart, and forth, where none perceives! 'T was this that that sweet lay meant You heard in dreams. Come, let us take rich payment, For every care that grieves, From Nature's prodigal purse.'T was this that May meant By sending forth that wind which 'round our eaves Whispered all night. Or was 't the Spirit who weaves, From gold and glaucous green of early leaves, Spring's radiant raiment? Up, up, my Heart, and forth, where none perceives! Come, let us forth, my Heart, where none divines! Into far woodland places, Where we may meet the fair, assembled races, Beneath the guardian pines, Of God's first flowers: poppy-celandines, And wake-robins and bugled columbines, With which her hair, her heavenly hair she twines, And loops and laces. Come let us forth, my Heart, where none divines! Forth, forth, my Heart, and let us find our dreams, There where they haunt each hollow! Dreams, luring us with Oread feet to follow, With flying feet of beams, Fleeter and lighter than the soaring swallow: Dreams, holding us with Dryad glooms and gleams; With Naiad looks, far stiller than still streams, That have beheld and still reflect, it seems, The God Apollo. Forth, forth, my Heart, and let us find our dreams! Out, out my Heart! the world is white with spring. Long have our dreams been pleaders: Now let them be our firm but gentle leaders. Come, let us forth and sing Among the amber-emerald-tufted cedars, And balm-o'-Gileads, cottonwoods, a-swing Like giant censers, that from leaf-cusps fling Balsams of gummy gold, bewildering The winds their feeders. Out, out, my Heart! the world is white with spring. Up, up, my Heart, and all thy hope put on! Array thyself in splendor! Like some bright dragonfly, some May-fly slender, The irised lamels don Of thy new armor; and, where burns the centre, Refulgent, of the widening rose of dawn, Spread thy wild wings! and, ere the hour be gone, Bright as a blast from some bold clarion, Thy Dream-world enter! Up, up, my heart, and all thy hope put on! IV. And then I heard it singing, The wind that kissed my hair, A song of wild expression, A song that called in session The wildflowers there up-springing, The wildflowers lightly flinging Their tresses to the air. And first the bloodroot-blooms of March In troops arose; each with its torch Of hollow snow, within which, bright, The calyx grottoed golden light. Hepatica and bluet, And gold corydalis. Rose, swaying to the aria; While phlox and dim dentaria In rapture, ere they knew it, Oped, nodding lightly to it, Faint as a first star is. And then a music, to the ear Inaudible, I seemed to hear; A symphony that seemed to rise And speak in colors to the eyes. I saw the Jacob's-Ladder Ring violet peal on peal Of perfume, azure-swinging; The bluebell slimly ringing Its purple chimes; and gladder, Green note on note, the madder Bells of the Solomon's-seal. Now far away; now near; now lost, I saw their fragrant music tossed, Mixed dimly with white interludes Of trilliums starring cool the woods. Then choral, solitary, I saw the celandine Smite bright its golden cymbals; The starwort shake its timbrels; The whiteheart's horns of Faery, With many a flourish airy, Strike silvery into line. And straight my soul they seemed to draw, By chords of loveliness and awe, Into a Faery World afar, Where all man's dreams and longings are. V. Then the face of a spirit looked down at me Out of the deeps of the opal morn: Its eyes were blue as a sunlit sea, And young with the joy of a star that has just been born: And I seemed to hear, with my soul, the rose of its cool mouth say: "Long I lay; long I lay, Low on the Hills of the Break-of-Day, Where ever the light is green and gray, And the gleam of the moon is a silvery spray, And the stars are glimmering bubbles: Now from the Hills of the Break-of-Day. I come, I come, on a rainbow ray, To laugh and sparkle, to leap and play, And blow from the face of the world away, Like mists, its cares and troubles." VI. And now that the dawn is everywhere Let us take this road through this wild green place, Where the rattlesnake-weed shows its yellow face, And the lichens cover the rocks with lace: Where tannin-touched is the wild free air, Let us take this path through the oaks where thin The low leaves whisper, "The day is fair, " And waters murmur, "Come in, come in! Where the wind of our foam can play with your hair And blow away care." Berry blossoms that seem to flow As the winds blow; Blackberry blossoms swing and sway To and fro Along our way, Like ocean spray on a breezy day, Over the green of the grass as foam on the green of a bay When the world is white and green with the white and the green of May. And here the bluets blooming Make little eyes at you; O'er which the bees go booming, Drunk with the honey-dew. O slender Quaker-ladies, O star-bright Quaker-ladies, With eyes of heavenly blue, With eyes of azure hue, Who, where the mossy shade is, Hold quiet Quaker-meeting, Are these your serenaders? Your gold-hipped serenaders, Who, humming love-songs true, And to your eyes repeating Soft ballads, stop to woo? Then change to ambuscaders, To gold galloond raiders, And rob the hearts of you, The golden hearts of you. And here the bells of the huckleberries toss, so it seems, in time, Delicate, tenderly white, clumped by the wildwood way, Swinging, it seems, inaudible peals of a dew clustered rhyme, Visible music, dropped from the virginal lips of the May, Crystally dropped, so it seems, blossoming bar upon bar, Pendent, pensively pale, star upon hollowed star. VII. The dewberries are blooming now; The days are long, the nights are short: Each dogwood and each black-haw bough Is bleached with bloom, and seems a part, Reflected palely on her brow, Of dreams that haunt the Year's young heart. But this will pass; and instantly The world forget the spring that was; And underneath the wild-plum tree, 'Mid hornet hum and wild-bee's buzz, Summer, in dreamy reverie, Will sit, all warm and amorous. Summer, with drowsy eyes and hair, Who walks the orchard aisles between; Whose hot touch tans the freckled pear, And crimsons peach and nectarine; And in the vineyard everywhere Bubbles with blue the grape's ripe green. Where now the briers blossoming are Soon will the berries darkly glow; Then summer pass: and, star on star, Where now the grass is strewn below With blossoms, soon, both near and far, Will lie th' obliterating snow. The star-flower, now that discs with gold The woodland moss, the forest grass, Already in a day is old, Already doth its beauty pass; Soon, undistinguished, with the mould 'T will mingle and will mix, alas! The bluet, too, that spreads its skies, Diminutive heavens, at our feet; And crowfoot-bloom, that, with orbed eyes Of amber, now our eyes doth greet, Shall fade and pass, and none surmise How once they made the Maytime sweet. VIII. But still the crowfoot trails its gold Along the edges of the oak wood old; And still, where spreads the water, white are seen The lilies islanded between The pads 'round archipelagoes of green; The jade-dark pads that pave The water's wrinkled wave, In which the warbler and the sparrow lave Their fluttered breasts and wings; Preening their backs, with many twitterings, With necks the moisture streaks; Then dipping deep their beaks, To which some bead of liquid coolness clings, As bending back their mellow throats They let the freshness trickle into notes. And now you hear The red-capped woodpecker rap close and clear; And now that acrobat, The yellow-breasted chat, Chuckles his grotesque music from Some tree that he hath clomb. And now, and now, Upon a locust bough, Hark how the honey-throated thrush Scatters the forest's emerald hush With notes of golden harmony, Taking the woods with witchery Or is 't some spirit none may see, Hid in the top of yonder tree, Who, in his house of leaves, of haunted green, Keeps trying, silver-sweet, his sunbeam flute serene? IX. Again the spirit looked down at me Out of the sunset's ruin of gold; Its eyes were dark as a moonless sea, And grave with the grief of a star that with sorrow is old: And I seemed to hear, with my soul, the flame of its sad mouth sigh: "Now good-by! now good-by! Down to the Caves of the Night go I: Where a shadowy couch of the purple sky, That the moon- and the starlight curtain high, Is spread for my joy and sorrow: Down to the Caves of the Night go I, Where side by side in mystery With all the Yesterdays I'll lie; And where, from my body, before I die, Will be born the young To-morrow." X. And now that the dusk draws down you see, Tipped by the weight of a passing bee, The milkwort's spike of blue, Of lavender hue, Nod like a goblin night-cap, slim, sedate, That night shall tassel with the dew, Beneath its canopy of flowering rue. And now, as twilight's purple state Deepens the oaks' dark vistas through, The owlet's cry of"Who, oh, who, Who walks so late?" Drifts like a challenge down to you. Or there on the twig of the oak-tree tall, The gray-green egg in the gray-green gall, You, too, might hear if you, too, would try, Might hear it open; all tinily Split, and the little round worm and white, That grows to a gnat in a summer night, Uncurl in its nest as it dreams of flight: In the heart of the weed that grows near by, The little gray worm that becomes a fly, A green wood-fly, a rainbowed fly, You, too, might hear if you, too, would try, As a leaf-bud pushes from forth a tree, Minute of movement, steadily, As it feels a yearning for wings begin, Under the milk of its larval skin The silent pressure of wings within. The west grows ashen, the woods grow berylwan; The redbird lifts its plaintive vesper-song, Where faint a fox or rabbit steals along: And in some vine-roofed hollow, far withdrawn, The creek-frog sounds his deeply guttural gong, As dusk comes on: The water's gnarld dwarf or gnome, Seated upon his temple's oozy dome, Calling the faithful unto prayer, Muezzin-like, the worshippers of the moon, The insect-folk of earth and air That join him in his twilight tune. Along the path where the lizard hides, An instant shadow the spider glides, The hairy spider that haunts the way, Crouching black by its earth-bored hole, An insect-ogre, that lairs with the mole, Hungry, seeking its insect prey, Fast to follow and swift to slay. And over your hands and over your face The cobweb brushes its phantom lace: And now from many a stealthy place, Woolly-winged and gossamer-gray, The woodland moths come fluttering, Marked and mottled with lichen hues, Seal-soft umbers and downy blues, Dark as the bark to which they cling. Now in the hollow of a hill, Like a glow-worm held in a giant hand, Under the sunset's last red band, And one star hued like a daffodil, The windowed lamp of a cabin glows, The charcoal-burner's, whose hut is poor, But ever open; beside whose door An oak grows gnarled and a pine stands slim. Clean of heart and of feature grim, Here he houses where no one knows, His only neighbors the cawing crows That make a roost of the pine's top limb; His only friend the fiddle he bows As he sits at his door in the eve's repose, Making it chuckle and sing and speak, Lovingly pressed to his swarthy cheek. And over many a root, through ferns and weeds, Past lonely places where the raccoon breeds, By many a rock and water lying dim, Roofed with the brier and the bramble-rose, Under a star and the new-moon's rim, Downward the wood-way leads to him, Down where the lone lamp gleams and glows, A pencil slim Of marigold light'under leaf and limb. XI. Ere that small sisterhood of misty-stars, The Pleiades, consents to grace the sky; While yet through sunset's tiger-tawny bars The evening-star shines downward like an eye, A torch, Enchantment, in her topaz tower Of twilight, kindles at the Day's last hour, Listen, and you may hear, now low, now high, A voice, a spirit, dreamier than a flower. There is a fellowship so still and sweet, A brotherhood, that speaks, unwordable, In every tree, in every flower you meet, The soul is fain to sit beneath its spell. And heart-admitted to their presence there, Those intimacies of the earth and air, It shall hear words, too wonderful to tell, Too deep to interpret, of unspoken prayer. And you may see the things no eyes have seen, And hear the things no ears have ever heard; The Murmur of the Woods, in gray and green, Will lean to you, its soul a whispered word; Or by your side, in hushed and solemn wise, The Silence sit; and, clothed in glimmering dyes Of pearl and purple, herding bee and bird, The Dusk steal by you with her shadowy eyes. Then through the Ugliness that toils in night, Uncouth, obscure, that hates the glare of day, The things that pierce the earth and know no light, And hide themselves in clamminess and clay, The dumb, ungainly things, that make a home Of mud and mire they hill and honeycomb, Through these, perhaps, in some mysterious way, Beauty may speak fairer than wind-blown foam. Not as it speaks, an eagle message, drawn From starry vastness of night's labyrinths: Not uttering itself from out the dawn In egret hues; nor from the cloud-built plinths Of sunset's splendor, speaking burningly Unto the spirit; nor all flowery From cygnet-colored cymes of hyacinths, But from the things that type humility. From things despised: even from the crawfish there, Hollowing its house of ooze a wet, vague sound Of sleepy slime; or from the mole, whose lair, Blind-tunnelled, corridores the earth around, Beauty may draw her truths, as draws its wings The butterfly from the dull worm that clings, Cocoon and chrysalis; and from the ground Address the soul through even senseless things. For oft my soul hath heard the trees' huge roots Fumble the darkness, clutching at the soil; Hath heard the green beaks of th' imprisoned shoots Peck at the boughs from which the leaves uncoil; Hath heard the buried germ soft split its pod, Groping its blind way up to light and God; The mushroom, laboring with gnome-like toil, Heave slow its white orb through the encircling sod. The winds and waters, stars and streams and flowers, The earth and rocks, each moss-tuft and each fern, The very lichens speak. This world of ours Is eloquent with things that bid us learn To pierce appearances, and so to mark, Within the stone and underneath the bark, Heard through some inward sense, the dreams that turn Outward to light and beauty from the dark. XII. I stood alone in a mountain place, And it came to pass, as I gazed on space, That I met with Mystery, face to face. Within her eyes my wondering soul beheld The eons past, the eons yet to come, At cosmic labor; and the stars, that swelled, Fiery or nebulous, from the darkness dumb, In each appointed place and period, I saw were words, whose hieroglyphic sum Blazoned one word, the mystic name of God. I walked alone 'mid the forest's maze, And it came to pass, as I went my ways, That I met with Beauty, face to face. Within her eyes my worshipping spirit saw The moments busy with the dreams whence spring Earth's loveliness: and all fair things that awe Man's soul with their perfection everything That buds and bourgeons, blossoming above, I saw were letters of enduring Law That bloomed one word, the beautiful name of Love.