Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Substratum. by Madison Julius Cawein
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Substratum.

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    Hear you r o music in the creaks
        Made by the sallow grasshopper,
    Who in the hot weeds sharply breaks
        The mellow dryness with his cheer?
        Or did you by the hearthstones hear
    The cricket's kind, shrill strain when frost
        Worked mysteries of silver near
    Upon the casement's panes, and lost
    Without the gate-post seemed a sheeted ghost?

    Or through the dank, dim Springtide's night
        Green minstrels of the marshlands tune
    Their hoarse lyres in the pale twilight,
        Hailing the sickle of the moon
        From flag-thronged pools that glassed her lune?
    Or in the Summer, dry and loud,
        The hard cicada whirr aboon
    His long lay in a poplar's cloud,
    When the thin heat rose wraith-like in a shroud?

    The cloud that lids the naked moon,
        And smites the myriad leaves with night
    Of stormy lashes, livid strewn
        With veins of branched and splintered light;
        The fruitful glebe with blossoms white,
    The thistle's purple plume; the tears
        Pearling the matin buds' delight,
    Contain a something, it appears,
    'Neath their real selves - a poetry that cheers.

    Nor scoff at those who on the wold
        See fairies whirling in the shine
    Of prodigal moons, whose lavish gold
        Paves wood-ways, forests wild with vine,
        When all the wilderness with wine
    Of tipsy dew is dazed; nor say
        Our God's restricted to confine
    His wonders solely to the day,
    That yields the abstract tangible to clay.

    Ponder the entrance of the Morn
        When from her rubric forehead far
    Shines one clean star, and the dead tarn,
        The wooded river's red as war:
        Where arid splinters of the scar
    Lock horns above a blue abyss,
        How roses prank each icy bar,
    While piled aloft the mountains press,
    Fling dawn below from many a hoary tress.

    The jutting crags, all stubborn-veined
        With iron life, where eaglets scream
    In dizzy flocks, and cleave the stained
        Mist-rainbows of the mountain stream;
        Thus you will drink the thickest cream
    Of nature if you do not scan
        The bald external; and must deem
    A plan existent in a plan -
    As life in thrifty trees or soul in man.



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