The Old Man Dreams

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The blackened walnut in its spicy hull
  Rots where it fell;
  And, in the orchard, where the trees stand full,
  The pear's ripe bell
  Drops; and the log-house in the bramble lane,
  From whose low door
  Stretch yellowing acres of the corn and cane,
  He sees once more.

  The cat-bird sings upon its porch of pine;
  And o'er its gate,
  All slender-podded, twists the trumpet-vine,
  A leafy weight;
  And in the woodland, by the spring, mayhap,
  With eyes of joy
  Again he bends to set a rabbit-trap,
  A brown-faced boy.

  Then, whistling, through the underbrush he goes,
  Out of the wood,
  Where, with young cheeks, red as an _Autumn_ rose,
  Beneath her hood,
  His sweetheart waits, her school-books on her arm;
  And now it seems
  Beside his chair he sees his wife's fair form--
  The old man dreams.

© Madison Julius Cawein