Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Path By The Creek. by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Path By The Creek.

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    There is a path that leads
    Through purple iron-weeds,
    By button-bush and mallow
    Along a creek;
    A path that wildflowers hallow,
    That wild birds seek;
    Roofed thick with eglantine
    And grape and trumpet-vine.

    This side, blackberries sweet
    Glow cobalt in the heat;
    That side, a creamy yellow,
    In summertime
    The pawpaws slowly mellow;
    And autumn's prime
    Strews red the Chickasaw,
    Persimmon brown and haw.

    The glittering dragon-fly,
    A wingéd flash, goes by;
    And tawny wasp and hornet
    Seem gleams that drone;
    The beetle, like a garnet,
    Slips from the stone;
    And butterflies float there,
    Spangling with gold the air.

    Here the brown thrashers hide,
    The chat and cat-bird chide;
    The blue kingfisher houses
    Above the stream,
    And here the heron drowses
    Lost in his dream;
    The vireo's flitting note
    Haunts all the wild remote.

    And now a cow's slow bell
    Tinkles along the dell;
    Where breeze-dropped petals winnow
    From blossomy limbs
    On waters, where the minnow,
    Faint-twinkling, swims;
    Where, in the root-arched shade,
    Slim prisms of light are laid.

    When in the tangled thorn
    The new-moon hangs a horn,
    Or, 'mid the sunset's islands,
    Guides a canoe,
    The brown owl in the silence
    Calls, and the dew
    Beads here its orbs of damp,
    Each one a firefly lamp.

    Then when the night is still
    Here sings the whippoorwill;
    And stealthy sounds of crickets,
    And winds that pass,
    Whispering, through bramble thickets
    Along the grass,
    Faint with far scents of hay,
    Seem feet of dreams astray.

    And where the water shines
    Dark through tree-twisted vines,
    Some water-spirit, dreaming,
    Braids in her hair
    A star's reflection; seeming
    A jewel there;
    While all the sweet night long
    Ripples her quiet song….

    Would I could imitate,
    O path, thy happy state!
    Making my life all beauty,
    All bloom and beam;
    Knowing no other duty
    Than just to dream,
    And far from pain and woe
    Lead feet that come and go.

    Leading to calm content,
    O'er ways the Master went,
    Through lowly things and humble,
    To peace and love;
    Teaching the lives that stumble
    To look above,
    Forget the world of toil
    And all its sad turmoil.




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