Anon the print of some designing fox
Or dog’s more honest paw ; the solid bowls
That held the heavy oxen’s spreading hoof;
And suddenly, in awe, the bear’s broad palm,
With almost human impress. Riding so,
Against the sky’s blue vacancy, I saw
How nature prints abroad and publishes
Her generous gospels. Here the wind-burnt bark
Like satin, glossed and quilted; scattered twigs
In mystic hieroglyphics ; the dry shrubs
That seem to point to something wise and grave,
The leafless stalks that rise so desolate
Out of their slender shafts within the drift,
And over all the brown straws of the pine.
Strong winter heats of the meridian sun
Smote the dumb earth, and she regained her voice.
The season and the summit passed at once
We entered to the valley, and forgot
How but an hour back we halted where
Under the dripping gables of the fir,
The slow drops softly sink their silent wells
Into the passive snow. More sweet I found
The sunny dream of autumn’s plentiful
And everlingering, everlasting peace.
And here at last I cast me at my length
In the mid valley, where the stream expands
Lakewise, and lilies lift their broad green palms
Against the sunshine, and the skaters skate
Upon the water, and the beetles dive
Into their shady gardens ; while ashore
A glossy water-thrush trips close upon
And curtsies at the margin as he wets
All of his slender body in the pool.
And here a myriad creatures built and toiled
At their incessant masonry. I heard
The meadows drinking in the wet. The earth
Meeting the sun did both together blend
Their powerful magnetisms. Now forgot
The wood, the torrent, and the gale ; no more
I looked upon the diamond-powdered snow,
But went afield, and in the meadow heard
The happy robin’s tender tremolo,
Page:The Overland Monthly, volume 1, issue 1.djvu/37
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.