Carrier Dove, The
A Summer's golden noon had laid
The dust and noise of busy toil;
All living things had sought the shade,
And ceased their musical turmoil;
For mute Earth to her bosom press'd
Her babbling children full of rest.
The woods were silent as a dream;
But dreams, with all their pageants rife,
Seemed never half so full of Life
The shrilly gnat had still'd his scream,
Or with its smooth unceasing stream
Made sound like very silence seem.
So deep the hush of Nature's jar
The Earth hung noiseless as a star.
Enamelled foliage flung the sheen
Of the rich sun-glare from its green, I
n lakes of emerald light, which lay
Untrembling where they fell;
The golden, unobstructed ray
So straight pursued its forward way
The frailest leaflet's serrate edge
Lay pictured on the granite ledge;
It seemed the rock might jar as well.
The still birds on the shadiest boughs,
Like thoughts just trembling on the tongue,
Silent, but full of music, hung;
Ye would have paused to see them rouse,
And waited for their song, with tips
Of the white teeth shown and the eye
Turned to the dumb woods askingly,
As ye would bend to list a friend
Whose fine face spoke before his lips.
The general hush had grown a pain
And once had begged for sound again,
Or ached to see the sleepers nod,
If in that calm it had not seemed
The Rest was true which Nature dreamed,
And into Man's heart, thrilling, streamed
Deep pulses from the Heart of God!
High Monarch of this royal realm
By Love's right holding all in fee,—
Beneath the shadow of an elm,
And on a rock whose giant helm
Scowled down its vizor, roofingly,
To shield his throne,—a Poet bowed;
Lover as well as Bard I ween;
And though unmoving as the tree
Which o'er him hold its pliant screon [sic],
And mute as the forsaken cloud
- Title
- Carrier Dove, The
- Alternative Title
- A summer's golden noon had laid
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Large Scrapbook 193
- Date
- Date tbd
- note
- A puzzling poem. Possibly incomplete (if there is an overleaf n the Scrapbook), but the meaning overall is opaque.
- A word in the penultimate line - "screon" - could be a misprint from "screen" - but neither word works smoothly in context.
- Media
-
The Carrier Dove
