Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Wood-Folk Lore. To T. B. M. by Bliss Carman (William)
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Wood-Folk Lore. To T. B. M.

    By Bliss Carman (William)



    For every one
    Beneath the sun,
    Where Autumn walks with quiet eyes,
    There is a word,
    Just overheard
    When hill to purple hill replies.

    This afternoon,
    As warm as June,
    With the red apples on the bough,
    I set my ear
    To hark and hear
    The wood-folk talking, you know how.

    There comes a "Hush!"
    And then a "Tush,"
    As tree to scarlet tree responds,
    "Babble away!
    He'll not betray
    The secrets of us vagabonds.

    "Are we not all,
    Both great and small,
    Cousins and kindred in a joy
    No school can teach,
    No worldling reach,
    Nor any wreck of chance destroy?"

    And so we are,
    However far
    We journey ere the journey ends,
    One brotherhood
    With leaf and bud
    And everything that wakes or wends.

    The wind that blows
    My autumn rose
    Where Grand Pré looks to Blomidon,--
    How great must be
    The company
    Of roses he has leaned upon,

    Since first he shed
    Their petals red
    Through Persian gardens long ago,
    When Omar heard
    His muttered word
    Rumoring things we may not know!

    Our brother ghost,
    He is a most
    Incorrigible wanderer;
    And still to-day
    He takes his way
    About my hills of spruce and fir;

    Will neither bide
    By the great tide,
    In apple lands of Acadie,
    Nor in the leaves
    About your eaves,
    Where Scituate looks out to sea.



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