In the Great Steep's Garden - Elizabeth Madox Roberts

In the Great Steep's Garden

Their steps are light and exceedingly fleet: They pass me by in the hurrying street.
I pause to look at a window’s show— From the white-flecked alp the hill winds blow—
And all at once it has passed me there, Lilting back to the land of the air,
Back to the land of the great white stills: Is it only the wind that comes down from the hills?
———
Was it Pikes Peak Pixie or Cheyenne Shee That whispered a gay little rhyme to me?
Or a gnome that lives in the heart of a stone And dances at dawn around Cameron’s Cone?
Did the haunting laugh of the Maid of the Corn, An Aztec memory trill on the morn?
Or soft did the Navajo Shell-Woman speak As she passed with a hymn for the great white peak?
———
They touch me light with their finger tips And lay little snatches of song on my lips,
And swift I am gone where the hill-streams flow, Where the pit-lark soars and the gentians blow.

Elizabeth Madox Roberts
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О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2009-01-07

Темы

Poetry

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