Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Three Of A Kind. by Bliss Carman (William)
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Three Of A Kind.

    By Bliss Carman (William)



    Three of us without a care
    In the red September
    Tramping down the roads of Maine,
    Making merry with the rain,
    With the fellow winds a-fare
    Where the winds remember.

    Three of us with shocking hats,
    Tattered and unbarbered,
    Happy with the splash of mud,
    With the highways in our blood,
    Bearing down on Deacon Platt's
    Where last year we harbored.

    We've come down from Kennebec,
    Tramping since last Sunday,
    Loping down the coast of Maine,
    With the sea for a refrain,
    And the maples neck and neck
    All the way to Fundy.

    Sometimes lodging in an inn,
    Cosey as a dormouse--
    Sometimes sleeping on a knoll
    With no rooftree but the Pole--
    Sometimes halely welcomed in
    At an old-time farmhouse.

    Loafing under ledge and tree,
    Leaping over boulders,
    Sitting on the pasture bars,
    Hail-fellow with storm or stars--
    Three of us alive and free,
    With unburdened shoulders!

    Three of us with hearts like pine
    That the lightnings splinter,
    Clean of cleave and white of grain--
    Three of us afoot again,
    With a rapture fresh and fine
    As a spring in winter!

    All the hills are red and gold;
    And the horns of vision
    Call across the crackling air
    Till we shout back to them there,
    Taken captive in the hold
    Of their bluff derision.

    Spray-salt gusts of ocean blow
    From the rocky headlands;
    Overhead the wild geese fly,
    Honking in the autumn sky;
    Black sinister flocks of crow
    Settle on the dead lands.

    Three of us in love with life,
    Roaming like wild cattle,
    With the stinging air a-reel
    As a warrior might feel
    The swift orgasm of the knife
    Slay him in mid-battle.

    Three of us to march abreast
    Down the hills of morrow!
    With a clean heart and a few
    Friends to clench the spirit to!--
    Leave the gods to rule the rest,
    And good-by, sorrow!



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