Public Domain Poetry And Stories - In The Garden At The Dawn Hour by Edgar Lee Masters
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In The Garden At The Dawn Hour

    By Edgar Lee Masters



    I arise in the silence of the dawn hour.
    And softly steal out to the garden
    Under the Favrile goblet of the dawning.
    And a wind moves out of the south-land,
    Like a film of silver,
    And thrills with a far borne message
    The flowers of the garden.
    Poppies untie their scarlet hoods and wave them
    To the south wind as he passes.
    But the zinnias and calendulas,
    In a mood of calm reserve, nod faintly
    As the south wind whispers the secret
    Of the dawn hour!

    I stand in the silence of the dawn hour
    In the garden,
    As the star of morning fades.
    Flying from scythes of air
    The hare-bells, purples and golden glow
    On the sand-hill back of the orchard
    Race before the feet of the wind.
    But clusters of oak-leaves over the yellow sand rim
    Begin to flutter and glisten.
    And in a moment, in a twinkled passion,
    The blazing rapiers of the sun are flashed,
    As he fences the lilac lights of the sky,
    And drives them up where the ice of the melting moon
    Is drowned in the waste of morning!

            *        *        *        *        *

    In the silence of the garden,
    At the dawn hour
    I turn and see you -
    You who knew and followed,
    You who knew the dawn hour,
    And its sky like a Favrile goblet.
    You who knew the south-wind
    Bearing the secret of the morning
    To waking gardens, fields and forests.
    You in a gown of green, O footed Iris,
    With eyes of dryad gray,
    And the blown glory of unawakened tresses -
    A phantom sprung out of the garden's enchantment,
    In the silence of the dawn hour!

            *        *        *        *        *

    And here I behold you
    Amid a trance of color, silent music,
    The embodied spirit of the morning:
    Wind from the south-land, flashing beams of the sun
    Caught in the twinkling oak leaves:
    Poppies who wave their untied hoods to the south wind;
    And the imperious bows of zinnias and calendulas;
    The star of morning drowned, and lights of lilac
    Turned white for the woe of the moon;
    And the silence of the dawn hour!

            *        *        *        *        *

    And there to take you in my arms and feel you
    In the glory of the dawn hour,
    Along the sinuous rhythm of flesh and flesh!
    To know your spirit by that oneness
    Of living and of love, in the twinkled passion
    Of life re-lit and visioned.
    In dryad eyes beholding
    The dancing, leaping, touching hands and racing
    Rapturous moment of the arisen sun;
    And the first drop of day out of this cup of Favrile.
    There to behold you,
    Our spirits lost together
    In the silence of the dawn hour!



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