FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   >>  
bling star shines there, on high: The hollow rivers, that were still and dry, Begin to murmur; falls a gentle spray Across the hills. The stubble colors through the fallen hay, And infant grasses pin the moistened clay; The drooping trees shake off their dust and sigh; And waking nature, with a gladdened eye, Beholds the summer lose its ending day, Across the hills. NORMAN HUTCHINSON. _Cornell Magazine._ ~Four-o'clocks.~ It was that they loved the children, The children used to say, For there was no doubt That when school was out, At the same time every day, Down by the wall, Where the grass grew tall, Under the hedge of the hollyhocks, One by one, At the touch of the sun, There opened the four-o'clocks. It was that they loved the children;-- But the children have gone away, And somebody goes When nobody knows, At the same time every day, To see by the wall, Where the grass grows tall, Under the hedge of the hollyhocks, How, one by one, At the touch of the sun, Still open the four-o'clocks. LILLIAN B. QUIMBY. _Wellesley Magazine,_ ~The Voice of the West Wind.~ The Wind of the East and the Wind of the North From the gates of the Sun and the Cold blow forth: They wander wide and they wander free, But never a word do they speak to me; I hear but the voice I know the best, Of my brother-in-blood the Wind of the West, And the word that the West Wind whispers me, Is a message, Heart of my heart, for thee. Heart of my heart, when the skies hang low, And all day long the light winds blow, When the South, and the East, and the North, are gray And the soft rain falls through the autumn day, Then, Light of my soul, canst thou not hear The voice of the West Wind, soft and clear? "Come," he whispers, and "Come," again, Leave the dull skies and the steady rain, Leave thou the lowlands and chill gray sea, Heart of my own heart, and come with me. ROBERT PALFREY UTTER. _Harvard Monthly_ ~A Fairy Barcarolle.~ My skiff is of bark from the white birch-tree, A butterfly's wing is my sail, And twisted grasses my cordage be, Stretched taut by the favoring gale. My cushions are pearly gossamers frail, My mast is a tapering reed, My rudder a blush-rose petal pale, My ballast of wild-flower seed. Through forests old and meads remote We'll sail on the leaf-arched streams, Down the silver rivers of Fancy float To the golde
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   >>  



Top keywords:

children

 

clocks

 

wander

 
whispers
 
hollyhocks
 

grasses

 

Magazine

 
Across
 

rivers

 

steady


lowlands

 

Harvard

 

Barcarolle

 
shines
 

Monthly

 

PALFREY

 

ROBERT

 
autumn
 

hollow

 
Through

forests

 
flower
 

ballast

 

remote

 
silver
 

streams

 

arched

 

rudder

 

twisted

 

cordage


butterfly

 

Stretched

 

tapering

 

gossamers

 
pearly
 

favoring

 
cushions
 
opened
 
waking
 

drooping


moistened

 

nature

 

Cornell

 
school
 

HUTCHINSON

 

Beholds

 

gladdened

 
summer
 

NORMAN

 
ending