Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Willow Water by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Willow Water

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    Deep in the hollow wood he found a way
    Winding unto a water, dim and gray,
    Grayer and dimmer than the break of day;
    By which a wildrose blossomed; flower on flower
    Leaning above its image hour on hour,
    Musing, it seemed, on its own loveliness,
    And longing with sweet longing to express
    Some thought to its reflection.

    Dropping now
    Bee-shaken pollen from th' o'erburdened bough,
    And now a petal, delicate as a blush,
    It seemed to sigh or whisper to the hush
    The dreams, the myths and marvels it had seen
    Tip-toeing dimly through the woodland green:
    Faint shapes of fragrance; forms like flowers, that go
    Footing the moss; or, shouldered with moonbeam glow,
    Through starlit waves oaring an arm of snow.

    He sat him down and gazed into the pool:
    And as he gazed, two petals, silken cool,
    Fell, soft as starbeams fall that arrow through
    The fern-hung trembling of a drop of dew;
    And, pearly-placid, on the water lay,
    Two curves of languid ruby, where, rose-gray,
    The shadow of a willow dimmed the stream.

    And suddenly he saw or did he dream
    He saw? the rose-leaves change to rosy lips,
    A laughing crimson. And, with silvery hips,
    And eyes of luminous emerald, full of sleep
    And all the stillness of the under deep,
    The shadow of the tree become a girl,
    A shadowy girl, who shook from many a curl
    Faint, tangled glimmerings of shell and pearl.

    A girl who called him, beckoned him to come,
    Waving a hand whiter than moonlit foam,
    And pointing, minnowy fingered, to her home
    A bubble, rainbow-built, beneath the wave,
    Dim-domed, and murmurous as the deep-sea cave,
    Columned of coral and of grottoed foam,
    Where the pale mermaids never cease to comb
    Their weed-green hair with fingers crystal-cold,
    Sighing forever 'round the Sea King old
    Throned. on his throne of shell and ribbéd gold.

    Laughing, she lured him, lipped like some wild rose;
    Bidding him follow; come to her; repose
    Upon her bosom and forever dream
    Lulled by the wandering whisper of the stream.
    But him mortality weighed heavily on
    And earthly love: and, sorrowful and wan,
    He shook his head, motioning, "I cannot rise";

    But still he felt the magic of her eyes
    Drawing him to her; felt her hands of foam
    Around his heart; her lips, that bade him come
    With smiling witchery, and with laughing looks
    Like those that lured us in the fairy books
    Our childhood dreamed on.

    Then, as suddenly,
    A wind, it seemed, from no where he could see,
    Wrinkled the water; ruffled its smooth glass;
    And there again, behold! when it did pass
    The rose-leaves lay and shadow, dimly seen;
    The willow's shadow, and no thing between.



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