The Poetry Corner

The Heart's Own Day

By Madison Julius Cawein

This is the heart's own day: With dreaming eyes Life seems to look away Beyond the skies Into some long-gone May. A May that can not die; Across whose hills Youth's heart goes singing by, 'Mid daffodils, With Love the young and shy. Love of the slender form And elvish face; Who with uplifted arm Points to one place A place of oldtime charm. Where once the lilies grew For Love to twine, With violets, white and blue, And columbine, Of gold and crimson hue. Gone is the long-ago; Gone like the wind; And Love we used to know Sits dumb and blind, With locks of winter snow. And by him Memory Sits sketching back Into the used-to-be, In white and black, One flower on his knee. One rose, whose crimson gleams Like Youth's glad heart, And fills the day with dreams, And is a part Of the old love it seems. That touches with the tints Of Faeryland This day; and makes a prince Of Samarcand, Of him, whose hand Hers held in dreams long since.