Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Wood Anemone by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Wood Anemone

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    The thorn-tree waved a bough of May
    And all its branches bent
    To indicate the wildwood way
    The Wind and Sunbeam went.

    A wildrose here, a wildrose there
    Lifted appealing eyes,
    And looked the path they did not dare
    Reveal in other wise.

    Wild parsley tossed a plume of gold
    And breathed so sweet a sigh,
    I guessed the way, it never told,
    Which they had hastened by.

    I traced the Beam, so swift and white,
    In many a woodland place
    By wildflower footprints of its flight
    And gleamings of its grace.

    I knew its joy had filled with song
    The high heart of the bird,
    That rippled, rippled all day long
    In dells that hushed and heard.

    I knew the Wind with flashing feet
    Had charmed the brook withal,
    Who in its cascades did repeat
    The music of that call.

    All were in league to help me find,
    Or tell to me the way,
    Which now before me, now behind,
    These two had gone in play.

    I could not understand how these
    Could hide so near to me,
    When by the whispering of the trees
    I knew the wood could see.

    Until, all breathless with its joy,
    The Wind, that could not rest,
    Ran past me, like a romping boy,
    And bade me look my best.

    And there I saw them clasped in bliss
    Beneath an old beech tree:
    And-here's the flower born of their kiss
    This wild anemone.

    "Revels the Moon did light."



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