The gray grows darker and denser
Till it and the earth are one;
A star swings out like a censer,
And the brief warm night is begun.
The brown moth floats and poises
Like a leaf in the windless air;
Aroused by insect noises
The gray toad leaves his lair;
Sounding the dusk depth quickly
The bull bats fall and rise,
And out of the grasses thickly
Swarm glistering fireflies.
Now darkness heavy, oppressive,
And silent completes the gloom.
The breathless night is excessive
With fragrance of perfume,
For the land is enmeshed and ablaze
With vines that blossom and trail,
Embanking the traveled ways
And festooning the fences of rail.
Afar in the southern sky
Heat-lightning flares and glows,
Vividly tinting the clouds that lie
At rest with a shimmer of rose
Tremulous, flitting, uncertain,
As a mystical light might shine
From under an ebon curtain
Before a terrible shrine.
Page:Southern Life in Southern Literature.djvu/450
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432
SOUTHERN LIFE IN SOUTHERN LITERATURE