Part I, Section 3:
NATURE.
NATURE.
| 1 | |
| New feet within my garden go, | |
| New fingers stir the sod; | |
| A troubadour upon the elm | |
| Betrays the solitude. | 5 |
| New children play upon the green, |
| New weary sleep below; |
| And still the pensive spring returns, |
| And still the punctual snow! |
| 10 | |
| Pink, small, and punctual, | |
| Aromatic, low, | |
| Covert in April, | |
| Candid in May, | 15 |
| Dear to the moss, |
| Known by the knoll, |
| Next to the robin |
| In every human soul. |
| Bold little beauty, | 20 |
| Bedecked with thee, | |
| Nature forswears | |
| Antiquity. | |
| 25 | |
| THE murmur of a bee | |
| A witchcraft yieldeth me. | |
| If any ask me why, | |
| 'T were easier to die | |
| Than tell. | 30 |
| The red upon the hill | |
| Taketh away my will; | |
| If anybody sneer, | |
| Take care, for God is here, | |
| That's all. | 35 |
| The breaking of the day | |
| Addeth to my degree; | |
| If any ask me how, | |
| Artist, who drew me so, | |
| Must tell! | 40 |
| Perhaps you'd like to buy a flower? | |
| But I could never sell. | |
| If you would like to borrow | |
| Until the daffodil | 45 |
| Unties her yellow bonnet |
| Beneath the village door, |
| Until the bees, from clover rows |
| Their hock and sherry draw, |
| Why, I will lend until just then, | 50 |
| But not an hour more! | |
| The pedigree of honey | |
| Does not concern the bee; | |
| A clover, any time, to him | 55 |
| Is aristocracy. | |
| Some keep the Sabbath going to church; | |
| I keep it staying at home, | 60 |
| With a bobolink for a chorister, | |
| And an orchard for a dome. | |
| Some keep the Sabbath in surplice; | |
| I just wear my wings, | |
| And instead of tolling the bell for church, | 65 |
| Our little sexton sings. | |
| God preaches,—a noted clergyman,— | |
| And the sermon is never long; | |
| So instead of getting to heaven at last, | |
| I'm going all along! | 70 |
| The bee is not afraid of me, | |
| I know the butterfly; | |
| The pretty people in the woods | |
| Receive me cordially. | 75 |
| The brooks laugh louder when I come, |
| The breezes madder play. |
| Wherefore, mine eyes, thy silver mists? |
| Wherefore, O summer's day? |
| 80 | |
| Some rainbow coming from the fair! | |
| Some vision of the world Cashmere | |
| I confidently see! | |
| Or else a peacock's purple train, | 85 |
| Feather by feather, on the plain | |
| Fritters itself away! | |
| The dreamy butterflies bestir, | |
| Lethargic pools resume the whir | |
| Of last year's sundered tune. | 90 |
| From some old fortress on the sun | |
| Baronial bees march, one by one, | |
| In murmuring platoon! | |
| The robins stand as thick to-day | |
| As flakes of snow stood yesterday, | 95 |
| On fence and roof and twig. | |
| The orchis binds her feather on | |
| For her old lover, Don the Sun, | |
| Revisiting the bog! | |
| Without commander, countless, still, | 100 |
| The regiment of wood and hill | |
| In bright detachment stand. | |
| Behold! Whose multitudes are these? | |
| The children of whose turbaned seas, | |
| Or what Circassian land? | 105 |
| The grass so little has to do,— | |
| A sphere of simple green, | |
| With only butterflies to brood, | 110 |
| And bees to entertain, | |
| And stir all day to pretty tunes | |
| The breezes fetch along, | |
| And hold the sunshine in its lap | |
| And bow to everything; | 115 |
| And thread the dews all night, like pearls, |
| And make itself so fine,— |
| A duchess were too common |
| For such a noticing. |
| And even when it dies, to pass | 120 |
| In odors so divine, | |
| As lowly spices gone to sleep, | |
| Or amulets of pine. | |
| And then to dwell in sovereign barns, | |
| And dream the days away,— | 125 |
| The grass so little has to do, | |
| I wish I were the hay! | |
| A little road not made of man, | |
| Enabled of the eye, | 130 |
| Accessible to thill of bee, | |
| Or cart of butterfly. | |
| If town it have, beyond itself, | |
| 'T is that I cannot say; | |
| I only sigh,—no vehicle | 135 |
| Bears me along that way. | |
| A drop fell on the apple tree, | |
| Another on the roof; | 140 |
| A half a dozen kissed the eaves, | |
| And made the gables laugh. | |
| A few went out to help the brook, | |
| That went to help the sea. | |
| Myself conjectured, Were they pearls, | 145 |
| What necklaces could be! | |
| The dust replaced in hoisted roads, | |
| The birds jocoser sung; | |
| The sunshine threw his hat away, | |
| The orchards spangles hung. | 150 |
| The breezes brought dejected lutes, |
| And bathed them in the glee; |
| The East put out a single flag, |
| And signed the fete away. |
| 155 | |
| A something in a summer's day, |
| As sIow her flambeaux burn away, |
| Which solemnizes me. |
| A something in a summer's noon,— | 160 |
| An azure depth, a wordless tune, | |
| Transcending ecstasy. | |
| And still within a summer's night | |
| A something so transporting bright, | |
| I clap my hands to see; | 165 |
| Then veil my too inspecting face, |
| Lest such a subtle, shimmering grace |
| Flutter too far for me. |
| The wizard-fingers never rest, | |
| The purple brook within the breast | 170 |
| Still chafes its narrow bed; | |
| Still rears the East her amber flag, |
| Guides still the sun along the crag |
| His caravan of red, |
| Like flowers that heard the tale of dews, | 175 |
| But never deemed the dripping prize | |
| Awaited their low brows; | |
| Or bees, that thought the summer's name | |
| Some rumor of delirium | |
| No summer could for them; | 180 |
| Or Arctic creature, dimly stirred |
| By tropic hint,—some travelled bird |
| Imported to the wood; |
| Or wind's bright signal to the ear, | |
| Making that homely and severe, | 185 |
| Contented, known, before | |
| The heaven unexpected came, |
| To lives that thought their worshipping |
| A too presumptuous psalm. |
| 190 | |
| This is the land the sunset washes, | |
| These are the banks of the Yellow Sea; | |
| Where it rose, or whither it rushes, | |
| These are the western mystery! | 195 |
| Night after night her purple traffic |
| Strews the landing with opal bales; |
| Merchantmen poise upon horizons, |
| Dip, and vanish with fairy sails. |
| 200 | |
| There is a flower that bees prefer, | |
| And butterflies desire; | |
| To gain the purple democrat | |
| The humming-birds aspire. | 205 |
| And whatsoever insect pass, |
| A honey bears away |
| Proportioned to his several dearth |
| And her capacity. |
| Her face is rounder than the moon, | 210 |
| And ruddier than the gown | |
| Of orchis in the pasture, | |
| Or rhododendron worn. | |
| She doth not wait for June; | |
| Before the world is green | 215 |
| Her sturdy little countenance | |
| Against the wind is seen, | |
| Contending with the grass, | |
| Near kinsman to herself, | |
| For privilege of sod and sun, | 220 |
| Sweet litigants for life. | |
| And when the hills are full, | |
| And newer fashions blow, | |
| Doth not retract a single spice | |
| For pang of jealousy. | 225 |
| Her public is the noon, |
| Her providence the sun, |
| Her progress by the bee proclaimed |
| In sovereign, swerveless tune. |
| The bravest of the host, | 230 |
| Surrendering the last, | |
| Nor even of defeat aware | |
| When cancelled by the frost. | |
| 235 | |
| Like trains of cars on tracks of plush |
| I hear the level bee: |
| A jar across the flowers goes, |
| Their velvet masonry |
| Withstands until the sweet assault | 240 |
| Their chivalry consumes, | |
| While he, victorious, tilts away | |
| To vanquish other blooms. | |
| His feet are shod with gauze, | |
| His helmet is of gold; | 245 |
| His breast, a single onyx | |
| With chrysoprase, inlaid. | |
| His labor is a chant, | |
| His idleness a tune; | |
| Oh, for a bee's experience | 250 |
| Of clovers and of noon! | |
| Presentiment is that long shadow on the lawn | |
| Indicative that suns go down; | |
| The notice to the startled grass | 255 |
| That darkness is about to pass. | |
| As children bid the guest good-night, | |
| And then reluctant turn, | |
| My flowers raise their pretty lips, | 260 |
| Then put their nightgowns on. | |
| As children caper when they wake, | |
| Merry that it is morn, | |
| My flowers from a hundred cribs | |
| Will peep, and prance again. | 265 |
| Angels in the early morning | |
| May be seen the dews among, | |
| Stooping, plucking, smiling, flying: | |
| Do the buds to them belong? | 270 |
| Angels when the sun is hottest |
| May be seen the sands among, |
| Stooping, plucking, sighing, flying; |
| Parched the flowers they bear along. |
| 275 | |
| So bashful when I spied her, |
| So pretty, so ashamed! |
| So hidden in her leaflets, |
| Lest anybody find; |
| So breathless till I passed her, | 280 |
| So helpless when I turned | |
| And bore her, struggling, blushing, | |
| Her simple haunts beyond! | |
| For whom I robbed the dingle, | |
| For whom betrayed the dell, | 285 |
| Many will doubtless ask me, | |
| But I shall never tell! | |
| It makes no difference abroad, | 290 |
| The seasons fit the same, | |
| The mornings blossom into noons, | |
| And split their pods of flame. | |
| Wild-flowers kindle in the woods, | |
| The brooks brag all the day; | 295 |
| No blackbird bates his jargoning | |
| For passing Calvary. | |
| Auto-da-fe and judgment | |
| Are nothing to the bee; | |
| His separation from his rose | 300 |
| To him seems misery. | |
| The mountain sat upon the plain | |
| In his eternal chair, | 305 |
| His observation omnifold, | |
| His inquest everywhere. | |
| The seasons prayed around his knees, | |
| Like children round a sire: | |
| Grandfather of the days is he, | 310 |
| Of dawn the ancestor. | |
| I'll tell you how the sun rose,— | |
| A ribbon at a time. | 315 |
| The steeples swam in amethyst, | |
| The news like squirrels ran. | |
| The hills untied their bonnets, | |
| The bobolinks begun. | |
| Then I said softly to myself, | 320 |
| "That must have been the sun!" | |
| But how he set, I know not. | |
| There seemed a purple stile | |
| Which little yellow boys and girls | |
| Were climbing all the while | 325 |
| Till when they reached the other side, |
| A dominie in gray |
| Put gently up the evening bars, |
| And led the flock away. |
| 330 | |
| The butterfiy's assumption-gown, |
| In chrysoprase apartments hung, |
| How condescending to descend, | |
| And be of buttercups the friend | 335 |
| Of all the sounds despatched abroad, | |
| There's not a charge to me | 340 |
| Like that old measure in the boughs, | |
| That phraseless melody | |
| The wind does, working like a hand | |
| Whose fingers brush the sky, | |
| Then quiver down, with tufts of tune | 345 |
| Permitted gods and me. | |
| When winds go round and round in bands, | |
| And thrum upon the door, | |
| And birds take places overhead, | |
| To bear them orchestra, | 350 |
| I crave him grace, of summer boughs, |
| If such an outcast be, |
| He never heard that fleshless chant |
| Rise solemn in the tree, |
| As if some caravan of sound | 355 |
| On deserts, in the sky, | |
| Had broken rank, | |
| Then knit, and passed | |
| In seamless company. | |
| 360 | |
| Apparently with no surprise | |
| To any happy flower, | |
| The frost beheads it at its play | |
| In accidental power. | 365 |
| The blond assassin passes on, | |
| The sun proceeds unmoved | |
| To measure off another day | |
| For an approving God. | |
| 370 | |
| 'T WAS later when the summer went |
| Than when the cricket came, |
| And yet we knew that gentle clock |
| Meant nought but going home. |
| 'T was sooner when the cricket went | 375 |
| Than when the winter came, | |
| Yet that pathetic pendulum | |
| Keeps esoteric time. | |
| 380 | |
| These are the days when birds come back, |
| A very few, a bird or two, |
| To take a backward look. |
| These are the days when skies put on | |
| The old, old sophistries of June,— | 385 |
| A blue and gold mistake. | |
| Oh, fraud that cannot cheat the bee, |
| Almost thy plausibility |
| Induces my belief, |
| Till ranks of seeds their witness bear, | 390 |
| And softly through the altered air | |
| Hurries a timid leaf! | |
| Oh, sacrament of summer days, | |
| Oh, last communion in the haze, | |
| Permit a child to join, | 395 |
| Thy sacred emblems to partake, |
| Thy consecrated bread to break, |
| Taste thine immortal wine! |
| 400 | |
| The morns are meeker than they were, |
| The nuts are getting brown; |
| The berry's cheek is plumper, |
| The rose is out of town. |
| The maple wears a gayer scarf, | 405 |
| The field a scarlet gown. | |
| Lest I should be old-fashioned, | |
| I'll put a trinket on. | |
| 410 | |
| The sky is low, the clouds are mean, |
| A travelling flake of snow |
| Across a barn or through a rut |
| Debates if it will go. |
| A narrow wind complains all day | 415 |
| How some one treated him; | |
| Nature, like us, is sometimes caught | |
| Without her diadem. | |
| 420 | |
| I think the hemlock likes to stand |
| Upon a marge of snow; |
| It suits his own austerity, |
| And satisfies an awe |
| That men must slake in wilderness, | 425 |
| Or in the desert cloy,— | |
| An instinct for the hoar, the bald, | |
| Lapland's necessity. | |
| The hemlock's nature thrives on cold; | |
| The gnash of northern winds | 430 |
| Is sweetest nutriment to him, | |
| His best Norwegian wines. | |
| To satin races he is nought; | |
| But children on the Don | |
| Beneath his tabernacles play, | 435 |
| And Dnieper wrestlers run. | |
| There's a certain slant of light, | |
| On winter afternoons, | |
| That oppresses, like the weight | 440 |
| Of cathedral tunes. | |
| Heavenly hurt it gives us; | |
| We can find no scar, | |
| But internal difference | |
| Where the meanings are. | 445 |
| None may teach it anything, |
| ' T is the seal, despair,— |
| An imperial affliction |
| Sent us of the air. |
| When it comes, the landscape listens, | 450 |
| Shadows hold their breath; | |
| When it goes, 't is like the distance | |
| On the look of death. | |




