The House of the Trees & Other Poems. A. Ethelwyn Wetherald

The House of the Trees & Other Poems - A. Ethelwyn Wetherald


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pattered to my nest,

      And smiled when sun-caressed.

      At eve the wind was flying

      Bird-like from bed to chair,

      Of brown leaves sere and dying

      It brought enough to spare,

      And dropped them here and there.

      At night-time without warning,

      I felt almost to pain

      The soul of the sun in the morning,

      And the soul of the wind and rain

      In my sleeping-room remain.

      Autumn Days

      AUTUMN days are sun crowned,

      Full of laughing breath;

      Light their leafy feet are dancing

      Down the way to death.

      Scarlet-shrouded to the grave

      I watch them gayly go;

      So may I as blithely die

      Before November snow.

      Woodland Worship

      HERE ’mid these leafy walls

      Are sylvan halls,

      And all the Sabbaths of the year

      Are gathered here.

      Upon their raptured mood

      My steps intrude,

      Then wait—as some freed soul might wait

      At heaven’s gate.

      Nowhere on earth—nowhere

      On sea or air,

      Do I as easily escape

      This earthly shape,

      As here upon the white

      And dizzy height

      Of utmost worship, where it seems

      Too still for dreams.

      When Days Are Long

      WHEN twilight late delayeth,

      And morning wakes in song,

      And fields are full of daisies,

      I know the days are long;

      When Toil is stretched at nooning,

      Where leafy pleasures throng,

      When nights o’errun in music,

      I know the days are long.

      When suns afoot are marching,

      And rains are quick and strong,

      And streams speak in a whisper,

      I know the days are long.

      When hills are clad in velvet,

      And winds can do no wrong,

      And woods are deep and dusky,

      I know the days are long.

      Out of Doors

      IN the urgent solitudes

      Lies the spur to larger moods;

      In the friendship of the trees

      Dwell all sweet serenities.

      Make Room

      ROOM for the children out of doors,

      For heads of gold or gloom;

      For raspberry lips and rose-leaf cheeks and palms,

      Make room—make room!

      Room for the springtime out of doors,

      For buds in green or bloom;

      For every brown bare-handed country weed

      Make room—make room!

      Room for earth’s sweetest out of doors,

      And for its worst a tomb;

      For housed-up griefs and fears, and scorns, and sighs,

      No room—no room!

      The Humming Bird

      AGAINST my window-pane

      He plunges at a mass

      Of buds—and strikes in vain

      The intervening glass.

      O sprite of wings and fire

      Outstretching eagerly,

      My soul with like desire

      To probe thy mystery,

      Comes close as breast to bloom,

      As bud to hot heart-beat,

      And gains no inner room,

      And drains no hidden sweet.

      September

      BUT yesterday all faint for breath,

      The Summer laid her down to die;

      And now her frail ghost wandereth

      In every breeze that loiters by.

      Her wilted prisoners look up,

      As wondering who hath broke their chain,

      Too deep they drank of summer’s cup,

      They have no strength to rise again.

      How swift the trees, their mistress gone,

      Enrobe themselves for revelry!

      Ungovernable winds upon

      The wold are dancing merrily.

      With crimson fruits and bursting nuts,

      And whirling leaves and flushing streams,

      The spirit of September cuts

      Adrift from August’s languid dreams.

      A little while the revellers

      Shall flame and flaunt and have their day,

      And then will come the messengers

      Who travel on a cloudy way.

      And after them a form of light,

      A sense of iron in the air,

      Upon the pulse a touch of might

      And winter’s legions everywhere.

      The March Orchard

      UNLEAVED, undrooping, still, they stand,

      This stanch and patient pilgrim band;

      October robbed them of their fruit,

      November stripped them to the root,

      The winter smote their helplessness

      With furious ire and stormy stress,

      And now they seem almost to stand

      In sight of Summer’s Promised Land.

      Yet seen through frosty window-panes,

      When bared and bound in wintry chains,

      Their lightsome spirits seemed to play

      With February as with May.

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