Cross Roads by Margaret E. (Margaret Elizabeth) Sangster
page 12 of 143 (08%)
page 12 of 143 (08%)
|
They know that soon the golden grain
Will wave above this fragrant loam; The birds, with singing, hasten home; And I, who watch them, feel their song Deep in my soul, and nothing wrong, Or mean or small, can touch my heart. . . . Down in the vale the smoke-wreaths start, To softly curl above the trees; The fingers of a vagrant breeze Steal tenderly across my hair, And toil is fled, and want, and care! The dawn is here! I climb the hill; My very oxen seem to thrill -- To feel the mystery of day. The sun creeps out, and far away From man-made law I worship God, Who made the light, the cloud, the sod; I worship smilingly, and sing! * * * The dawn is here, and with it -- spring! THE HAUNTED HOUSE It stands neglected, silent, far from the ways of men, A lonely little cottage beside a lonely glen; |
|