Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Forest Idyl by Madison Julius Cawein
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A Forest Idyl

    By Madison Julius Cawein



I.

    Beneath an old beech-tree
    They sat together,
    Fair as a flower was she
    Of summer weather.
    They spoke of life and love,
    While, through the boughs above,
    The sunlight, like a dove,
    Dropped many a feather.

II.

    And there the violet,
    The bluet near it,
    Made blurs of azure wet
    As if some spirit,
    Or woodland dream, had gone
    Sprinkling the earth with dawn,
    When only Fay and Faun
    Could see or hear it.

III.

    She with her young, sweet face
    And eyes gray-beaming,
    Made of that forest place
    A spot for dreaming:
    A spot for Oreads
    To smooth their nut-brown braids,
    For Dryads of the glades
    To dance in, gleaming.

IV.

    So dim the place, so blest,
    One had not wondered
    Had Dian's moonéd breast
    The deep leaves sundered,
    And there on them awhile
    The goddess deigned to smile,
    While down some forest aisle.
    The far hunt thundered.

V.

    I deem that hour perchance
    Was but a mirror
    To show them Earth's romance
    And draw them nearer:
    A mirror where, meseems,
    All that this Earth-life dreams,
    All loveliness that gleams,
    Their souls saw clearer.

VI.

    Beneath an old beech-tree
    They dreamed of blisses;
    Fair as a flower was she
    That summer kisses:
    They spoke of dreams and days,
    Of love that goes and stays,
    Of all for which life prays,
    Ah me! and misses.



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