• There is no rhyme that is half so sweet
    As the song of the wind in the rippling wheat;
    There is no metre that ’s half so fine
    As the lilt of the brook under rock and vine;
    And the loveliest lyric I ever heard
    Was the wildwood strain of a forest bird.—
    If the wind and the brook and the bird would teach
    My heart their beautiful parts of...

  • Can freckled Auguest,—drowsing warm and blonde
      Beside a wheat-shock in the white-topped mead,
    In her hot hair the oxeyed daisies wound,—
      O bird of rain, lend aught but sleepy heed
      To thee? when no plumed weed, no feather’d seed
    Blows by her; and no ripple breaks the pond,
      That gleams like flint between its rim of grasses,
      ...

  • Teach me the secret of thy loveliness,
      That, being made wise, I may aspire to be
    As beautiful in thought, and so express
      Immortal truths to earth’s mortality;
    Though to my soul ability be less
      Than ’t is to thee, O sweet anemone.

    Teach me the secret of thy innocence,
      That in simplicity I may grow wise,
    Asking from Art no...

  • Through some strange sense of sight or touch
    I find what all have found before,
    The presence I have feared so much,
    The unknown’s immaterial door.

    I seek not and it comes to me;
    The do not know the thing I find:
    The fillet of fatality
    Drops from my brows that made me blind.

    Point forward now or backward, light!
    The way...

  • An heritage of hopes and fears
    And dreams and memory,
    And vices of ten thousand years
    God gives to thee.

    A house of clay, the home of Fate,
    Haunted of Love and Sin,
    Where Death stands knocking at the gate
    To let him in.

  • Calling, the heron flies athwart the blue
    That sleeps above it; reach on rocky reach
    Of water sings by sycamore and beech,
    In whose warm shade bloom lilies not a few.
    It is a page whereon the sun and dew
    Scrawl sparkling words in dawn’s delicious speech;
    A laboratory where the wood-winds teach,
    Dissect each scent and analyze each hue....

  • We have sent him seeds of the melon’s core,
    And nailed a warning upon his door;
    By the Ku Klux laws we can do no more.

    Down in the hollow, mid crib and stack,
    The roof of his low-porched house looks black,
    Not a line of light at the doorsill’s crack.

    Yet arm and mount! and mask and ride!
    The hounds can sense though the fox may hide!...

  • The wind IN THE PINES
    WHEN winds go organing through the pines
    On hill and headland, darkly gleaming,
    Meseems I hear sonorous lines
    Of Iliads that the woods are dreaming.

    OPPORTUNITY
    BEHOLD a hag whom Life denies a kiss
    As he rides questward in knight-errant-wise;
    Only when he hath passed her is it his
    To know, too late,...

  • With eyes hand-arched he looks into
    The morning’s face, then turns away
    With schoolboy feet, all wet with dew,
    Out for a holiday.

    The hill brook sings, incessant stars,
    Foam-fashioned, on its restless breast;
    And where he wades its water-bars
    Its song is happiest.

    A comrade of the chinquapin,
    He looks into its knotted...

  • The song-birds? are they flown away?
      The song-birds of the summer-time,
    That sang their souls into the day,
      And set the laughing days to rhyme?—
    No catbird scatters through the hush
      The sparkling crystals of its song;
    Within the woods no hermit-thrush
      Trails an enchanted flute along,
    A sweet assertion of the hush.

    ...