Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Uncertainty by Madison Julius Cawein
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Uncertainty

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    "'He cometh not,' she said."

    Mariana


    It will not be to-day and yet
    I think and dream it will; and let
    The slow uncertainty devise
    So many sweet excuses, met
    With the old doubt in hope's disguise.

    The panes were sweated with the dawn;
    Yet through their dimness, shriveled drawn,
    The aigret of one princess-feather,
    One monk's-hood tuft with oilets wan,
    I glimpsed, dead in the slaying weather.

    This morning, when my window's chintz
    I drew, how gray the day was! Since
    I saw him, yea, all days are gray!
    I gazed out on my dripping quince,
    Defruited, gnarled; then turned away

    To weep, but did not weep: but felt
    A colder anguish than did melt
    About the tearful-visaged year!
    Then flung the lattice wide, and smelt
    The autumn sorrow: Rotting near

    The rain-drenched sunflowers bent and bleached,
    Up which the frost-nipped gourd-vines reached
    And morning-glories, seeded o'er
    With ashen aiglets; whence beseeched
    One last bloom, frozen to the core.

    The podded hollyhocks, that Fall
    Had stripped of finery, by the wall
    Rustled their tatters; dripped and dripped,
    The fog thick on them: near them, all
    The tarnished, haglike zinnias tipped.

    I felt the death and loved it: yea,
    To have it nearer, sought the gray,
    Chill, fading garth. Yet could not weep,
    But wandered in an aimless way,
    And sighed with weariness for sleep.

    Mine were the fog, the frosty stalks;
    The weak lights on the leafy walks;
    The shadows shivering with the cold;
    The breaking heart; the lonely talks;
    The last, dim, ruined marigold.

    But when to-night the moon swings low
    A great marsh-marigold of glow
    And all my garden with the sea
    Moans, then, through moon and mist, I know
    My love will come to comfort me.



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