Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Autumn Etchings by Madison Julius Cawein
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Autumn Etchings

    By Madison Julius Cawein



I.

    Morning

    Her rain-kissed face is fresh as rain,
    Is cool and fresh as a rain-wet leaf;
    She glimmers at my window-pane,
    And all my grief
    Becomes a feeble rushlight, seen no more
    When the gold of her gown sweeps in my door.

II.

    Forenoon

    Great blurs of woodland waved with wind;
    Gray paths, down which October came,
    That now November's blasts have thinned
    And flecked with fiercer flame,
    Are her delight. She loves to lie
    Regarding with a gray-blue eye
    The far-off hills that hold the sky:
    And I I lie and gaze with her
    Beyond the autumn woods and ways
    Into the hope of coming days,
    The spring that nothing shall deter,
    That puts my soul in unison
    With what's to do and what is done.

III.

    Noon

    Wild grapes that purple through
    Leaves that are golden;
    Brush-fires that pillar blue
    Woods, that, enfolden
    Deep in the haze of dreams,
    In resignation
    Give themselves up, it seems,
    To divination:
    Woods, that, ablaze with oak,
    That the crow flew in,
    Gaze through the brushwood smoke
    On their own ruin,
    And on the countenance of Death who stalks
    Amid their miles,
    While to himself he talks
    And smiles:
    Where, in their midst, Noon sits and holds
    Communion with their grays and golds,
    Transforming with her rays their golds and grays,
    And in my heart the memories of dead days.

IV.

    Afternoon

    Wrought-iron hues of blood and bronze,
    Like some wild dawn's,
    Make fierce each leafy spire
    Of blackberry brier,
    Where, through their thorny fire,
    She goes, the Afternoon, from wood to wood,
    From crest to oak-crowned crest
    Of the high hill-lands, where the Morning stood
    With rosy-ribboned breast.
    Along the hills she takes the tangled path
    Unto the quiet close of day,
    Musing on what a lovely death she hath
    The unearthly golden beryl far away
    Banding the gradual west,
    Seen through cathedral columns of the pines
    And minster naves of woodlands arched with vines;
    The golden couch, spread of the setting sun,
    For her to lie, and me to gaze, upon.

V.

    Evening

    The winds awake,
    And, whispering, shake
    The aster-flower whose doom is sealed;
    The sumach-bloom
    Bows down its plume;
    And, blossom-Bayard of the field,
    The chicory stout
    To the winds' wild rout
    Lifts up its ragged shield.
    Low in the west the Evening shows
    A ridge of rose;
    And, stepping Earthward from the hills,
    Where'er she goes
    The cricket wakes, and all the silence spills
    With reed-like music shaken from the weeds:
    She takes my hand
    And leads
    Softly my soul into the Fairyland,
    The wonder-world of gold and chrysolite,
    She builds there at the haunted edge of night.

VI.

    Night

    Autumn woods the winds tramp down
    Sowing acorns left and right,
    Where, in rainy raiment, Night
    Tiptoes, rustling wild her gown
    Dripping in the moon's pale light,
    In the moonlight wan that hurries
    Trailing now a robe of cloud
    Now of glimmer, ghostly browed,
    Through the leaves whose wildness skurries,
    And whose tatters swirl and swarm
    Round her in her stormy starkness;
    She who takes my heart that leaps,
    That exults, and onward sweeps,
    Like a red leaf in the darkness
    And the tumult of the storm.



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