AFOOT

There's a garden in the South

Where the early violets come,

Where they strew the floor of April

With their purple, bloom by bloom.

There the tender peach-trees blow,

Pink against the red brick wall,

And the hand of twilight hushes

The rain-children's least footfall,

Till at midnight I can hear

The dark Mother croon and lean

Close above me. And her whisper

Bids the vagabonds convene.

Then the glad and wayward heart

Dreams a dream it must obey;

And the wanderer within me

Stirs a foot and will not stay.

I would journey far and wide

Through the provinces of spring,

Where the gorgeous white azaleas

Hear the sultry yorlin sing.

I would wander all the hills

Where my fellow-vagrants wend,

Following the trails of shadows

To the country where they end.

Well I know the gypsy kin,

Roving foot and restless hand,

And the eyes in dark elusion

Dreaming down the summer land.

On the frontier of desire

I will drink the last regret,

And then forth beyond the morrow

Where I may but half forget.

So another year shall pass,

Till some noon the gardener Sun

Wanders forth to lay his finger

On the peach-buds one by one.

And the Mother there once more

Will rewhisper her dark word,

That my brothers all may wonder,

Hearing then as once I heard.

There will come the whitethroat's cry,

That far lonely silver strain,

Piercing, like a sweet desire,

The seclusion of the rain.

And though I be far away,

When the early violets come

Smiling at the door with April,

Say, "The vagabonds are home!"