The Poetry Corner

Late October Woods

By Madison Julius Cawein

Clumped in the shadow of the beech, In whose brown top the crows are loud, Where, every side, great briers reach And cling like hands, the beechdrops crowd The mossy cirque with neutral tints Of gray; and deep, with berries bowed, The buckbush reddens 'mid the mints. O'erhead the forest scarcely stirs: The wind is laid: the sky is blue: Bush-clover, with its links of burs, And some last blooms, few, pink of hue, Makes wild the way- and everywhere Slim, white-ribbed cones of fungi strew The grass that's like a wildman's hair. The jewel-weeds, whose pods bombard The hush with fairy batteries Of seeds, grow dense here; pattering hard Their sacs explode, persuade the eyes To search the heaven for show 'rs. One seems To walk where old Enchantment plies Her shuttle of lost days and dreams. And, lo! yon rock of fern and flower, That heaves its height from bramble deeps, All on a sudden seems the tower Wherein the Sleeping Beauty sleeps: And that red vine, the fire-drake, The flaming dragon, seems, that keeps The world from her no man may wake.