Public Domain Poetry And Stories - At The Lane's End by Madison Julius Cawein
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At The Lane's End

    By Madison Julius Cawein



I.

    No more to strip the roses from
    The rose-boughs of her porch's place!
    I dreamed last night that I was home
    Beside a rose her face.

    I must have smiled in sleep who knows?
    The rose aroma filled the lane;
    I saw her white hand's lifted rose
    That called me home again.

    And yet when I awoke so wan,
    An old face wet with icy tears!
    Somehow, it seems, sleep had misdrawn
    A love gone thirty years.

II.

    The clouds roll up and the clouds roll down
    Over the roofs of the little town;
    Out in the hills where the pike winds by
    Fields of clover and bottoms of rye,
    You will hear no sound but the barking cough
    Of the striped chipmunk where the lane leads off;
    You will hear no bird but the sapsuckers
    Far off in the forest, that seems to purr,
    As the warm wind fondles its top, grown hot,
    Like the docile back of an ocelot:
    You will see no thing but the shine and shade
    Of briers that climb and of weeds that wade
    The glittering creeks of the light, that fills
    The dusty road and the red-keel hills
    And all day long in the pennyroy'l
    The grasshoppers at their anvils toil;
    Thick click of their tireless hammers thrum,
    And the wheezy belts of their bellows hum;
    Tinkers who solder the silence and heat
    To make the loneliness more complete.
    Around old rails where the blackberries
    Are reddening ripe, and the bumble-bees
    Are a drowsy rustle of Summer's skirts,
    And the bob-white's wing is the fan she flirts.
    Under the hill, through the iron weeds,
    And ox-eyed daisies and milkweeds, leads
    The path forgotten of all but one.
    Where elder bushes are sick with sun,
    And wild raspberries branch big blue veins
    O'er the face of the rock, where the old spring rains
    Its sparkling splinters of molten spar
    On the gravel bed where the tadpoles are,
    You will find the pales of the fallen fence,
    And the tangled orchard and vineyard, dense
    With the weedy neglect of thirty years.
    The garden there, where the soft sky clears
    Like an old sweet face that has dried its tears;
    The garden plot where the cabbage grew
    And the pompous pumpkin; and beans that blew
    Balloons of white by the melon patch;
    Maize; and tomatoes that seemed to catch
    Oblong amber and agate balls
    Thrown from the sun in the frosty falls:
    Long rows of currants and gooseberries,
    And the balsam-gourd with its honey-bees.
    And here was a nook for the princess-plumes,
    The snap-dragons and the poppy-blooms,
    Mother's sweet-williams and pansy flowers,
    And the morning-glories' bewildered bowers,
    Tipping their cornucopias up
    For the humming-birds that came to sup.
    And over it all was the Sabbath peace
    Of the land whose lap was the love of these;
    And the old log-house where my innocence died,
    With my boyhood buried side by side.
    Shall a man with a face as withered and gray
    As the wasp-nest stowed in a loft away,
    Where the hornets haunt and the mortar drops
    From the loosened logs of the clap-board tops;
    Whom vice has aged as the rotting rooms
    The rain where memories haunt the glooms;
    A hitch in his joints like the rheum that gnats
    In the rasping hinge of the door that jars;
    A harsh, cracked throat like the old stone flue
    Where the swallows build the summer through;
    Shall a man, I say, with the spider sins
    That the long years spin in the outs and ins
    Of his soul returning to see once more
    His boyhood's home, where his life was poor
    With toil and tears and their fretfulness,
    But rich with health and the hopes that bless
    The unsoiled wealth of a vigorous youth;
    Shall he not take comfort and know the truth
    In its threadbare raiment of falsehood? Yea!
    In his crumbled past he shall kneel and pray,
    Like a pilgrim come to the shrine again
    Of the homely saints that shall soothe his pain,
    And arise and depart made clean from stain!

III.

    Years of care can not erase
    Visions of the hills and trees
    Closing in the dam and race;
    Not the mile-long memories
    Of the mill-stream's lovely place.

    How the sunsets used to stain
    Mirror of the water lying

    Under eaves made dark with rain!
    Where the red-bird, westward flying,
    Lit to try one song again.

    Dingles, hills, and woods, and springs,
    Where we came in calm and storm,
    Swinging in the grape-vine swings,
    Wading where the rocks were warm,
    With our fishing-nets and strings.

    Here the road plunged down the hill,
    Under ash and chinquapin,
    Where the grasshoppers would drill
    Ears of silence with their din,
    To the willow-girdled mill.

    There the path beyond the ford
    Takes the woodside, just below
    Shallows that the lilies sword,
    Where the scarlet blossoms blow
    Of the trumpet-vine and gourd.

    Summer winds, that sink with heat,
    On the pelted waters winnow
    Moony petals that repeat
    Crescents, where the startled minnow
    Beats a glittering retreat.

    Summer winds that bear the scent
    Of the iron-weed and mint,
    Weary with sweet freight and spent,
    On the deeper pools imprint
    Stumbling steps in many a dent.

    Summer winds, that split the husk
    Of the peach and nectarine,
    Trail along the amber dusk
    Hazy skirts of gray and green,
    Spilling balms of dew and musk.

    Where with balls of bursting juice
    Summer sees the red wild-plum
    Strew the gravel; ripened loose,
    Autumn hears the pawpaw drum
    Plumpness on the rocks that bruise:

    There we found the water-beech,
    One forgotten August noon,
    With a hornet-nest in reach,
    Like a fairyland balloon,
    Full of bustling fairy speech.

    Some invasion sure it was;
    For we heard the captains scold;
    Waspish cavalry a-buzz,
    Troopers uniformed in gold,
    Sable-slashed, to charge on us.

    Could I find the sedgy angle,
    Where the dragon-flies would turn
    Slender flittings into spangle
    On the sunlight? or would burn
    Where the berries made a tangle

    Sparkling green and brassy blue;
    Rendezvousing, by the stream,
    Bands of elf-banditti, who,
    Brigands of the bloom and beam,
    Drunken were with honey-dew.

    Could I find the pond that lay
    Where vermilion blossoms showered
    Fragrance down the daisied way?
    That the sassafras embowered
    With the spice of early May?

    Could I find it did I seek
    The old mill? Its weather-beaten
    Wheel and gable by the creek?
    With its warping roof; worm-eaten,
    Dusty rafters worn and weak.

    Where old shadows haunt old places,
    Loft and hopper, stair and bin;
    Ghostly with the dust that laces
    Webs that usher phantoms in,
    Wistful with remembered faces.

    While the frogs' grave litanies
    Drowse in far-off antiphone,
    Supplicating, till the eyes
    Of dead friendships, long alone
    In the dusky corners, rise.

    Moonrays or the splintered slip
    Of a star? within the darkling
    Twilight, where the fire-flies dip
    As if Night a myriad sparkling
    Jewels from her hands let slip:

    While again some farm-boy crosses,
    With a corn-sack for the meal,
    O'er the creek, through ferns and mosses
    Sprinkled by the old mill-wheel,
    Where the water drips and tosses.



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