Page:Poems of Nature and Life.djvu/355

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

SPUING MORNING OF A BEREAVED MAN 345

Fair forests ! Once in happier days how sweet ye seemed

when sere ! Ye mind me now of vanished joys ; ah, why were ye so dear ?

��And the merry trout shall sport about within our favorite

brook, Where oft we sat on leafy mat to ponder o'er our book, While the partridge roamed the forest and the squirrel chat- tered shrill. And over head the boughs hung dead, and all the winds were

still. When the flowerless clematis, grown old, has gained a bristly

beard, And the crow screams loud, from leafy shroud of the dark

pine groves heard ; When, hushed around, all other sound is silent as the grave. And asters blue shall mock the hue that gleams beneath the

wave. All I shall see that gladdened me, except one well-known face ; When autumn weaves our couch of leaves, thy seat is empty

space.

��I shall tread back the well-known track, the book shall be

forgot ; My feet shall pass through rustling grass to reach our lonely

cot; The light shall spill o'er every hill in showers of dazzling rays, And from each sod the golden-rod in every field shall blaze ; And katydid, through daylight hid, at eve his song shall sing, And full of mirth before the hearth shall make the twilight

ring; While in the orchard the red owl mews from his apple-tree. And the gray one in the deep pine wood sits neighing mourn- fully ;

�� �