Poems by Madison Julius Cawein
page 23 of 235 (09%)
page 23 of 235 (09%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
We'll part; and, parting, I again
Shall bend and kiss her face. And homeward, singing, I shall go Along the cricket-chirring ways, While sunset, one long crimson blaze Of orchards, lingers low: And my dead youth again I'll know, And all her love, when spring is here-- Whose memory holds me many a year, Whose love still haunts me so! III I would not die when Springtime lifts The white world to her maiden mouth, And heaps its cradle with gay gifts, Breeze-blown from out the singing South: Too full of life and loves that cling; Too heedless of all mortal woe, The young, unsympathetic Spring, That Death should never know. I would not die when Summer shakes Her daisied locks below her hips, And naked as a star that takes A cloud, into the silence slips: Too rich is Summer; poor in needs; In egotism of loveliness Her pomp goes by, and never heeds |
|