Julia Caroline Ripley Dorr

  • A path across a meadow fair and sweet,
    Where clover-blooms the lithesome grasses greet,
    A path worn smooth by his impetuous feet.
    A straight, swift path—and at its end, star
    Gleaming behind the lilac’s fragrant bar,
    And her soft eyes, more luminous by far...

  • On hoary Conway’s battlemented height,
    O poet-heart, I pluck for thee a rose!
    Through arch and court the sweet wind wandering goes;
    Round each high tower the rooks in airy flight
    Circle and wheel, all bathed in amber light;
    Low at my feet the winding river...

  • O earth! art thou not weary of thy graves?
    Dear, patient mother Earth, upon thy breast
    How are they heaped from farthest east to west!
    From the dim north, where the wild storm-wind raves
    O’er the cold surge that chills the shore it laves,
    To sunlit isles...

  • The sun comes up and the sun goes down;
    The night mist shroudeth the sleeping town;
    But if it be dark or if it be day,
    If the tempests beat or the breezes play,
    Still here on this upland slope I lie,
    Looking up to the changeful sky.

    Naught am I...