Harvesting

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I.

NOON.

  The tanned and sultry noon climbs high
  Up gleaming reaches of the sky;
  Below the balmy belts of pines
  The cliff-lunged river laps and shines;
  Adown the aromatic dell
  Sifts the warm harvest's musky smell.
  And, oh! above one sees and hears
  The brawny-throated harvesters;
  Their red brows beaded with the heat,
  By twos and threes among the wheat
  Flash their hot sickles' slenderness
  In loops of shine; and sing, and sing,
  Like some mad troop of piping Pan,
  Along the hills that swoon or ring
  With sounds of Ariel airiness
  That haunted freckled Caliban:

  "O ho! O ho! 'tis noon, I say;
  The roses blow.
  Away, away, above the hay
  The burly bees to the roses gay
  Hum love-tunes all the livelong day,
  So low! so low!
  The roses' Minnesingers they."


II.

TWILIGHT.

  Up velvet lawns of lilac skies
  The tawny moon begins to rise
  Behind low blue-black hills of trees,
  As rises from faint Siren seas,
  To rock in purple deeps, hip-hid,
  A virgin-bosom'd Oceanid.
  Gaunt shadows crouch by rock and wood,
  Like hairy Satyrs, grim and rude,
  Till the white Dryads of the moon
  Come noiseless in their silver shoon
  To beautify them with their love.
  The sweet, sad notes I hear, I hear,
  Beyond dim pines and mellow hills,
  Of some fair maiden harvester,
  The lovely Limnad of the grove
  Whose singing charms me while it kills:

  "O deep! O deep! the twilight rare
  Pales on to sleep;
  And fair, so fair! fades the rich air.
  The fountain shines in its ferny lair,
  Where the cold Nymph sits in her oozy hair
  To weep, to weep,
  For a mortal youth who is not there."

© Madison Julius Cawein