The wet trees hang above the walks Purple with damps and earthish stains, And strewn by moody, absent rains With rose-leaves from the wild-grown stalks. Unmown, in heavy, tangled swaths, The ripe June-grass is wanton blown; Snails slime the untrodden threshold-stone; Along the sills hang drowsy moths. Down the blank visage of the wall, Where many a wavering trace appears, Like a forgotten trace of tears, From swollen eaves the slow drops crawl. Where everything was wide before, The curious wind, that comes and goes, Finds all the latticed windows close, Secret and close the bolted door. And with the shrewd and curious wind, That in the archéd doorway cries, 28 And at the bolted portal tries, And harks and listens at the blind,–– Forever lurks my thought about, And in the ghostly middle-night Finds all the hidden windows bright, And sees the guests go in and out, And lingers till the pallid dawn, And feels the mystery deeper there In silent, gust-swept chambers, bare, With all the midnight revel gone; But wanders through the lonesome rooms, Where harsh the astonished cricket calls, And, from the hollows of the walls Vanishing, start unshapen glooms; And lingers yet, and cannot come Out of the drear and desolate place, So full of ruin’s solemn grace, And haunted with the ghost of home.

29

BUBBLES.

I. I stood on the brink in childhood, And watched the bubbles go From the rock-fretted, sunny ripple To the smoother tide below; And over the white creek-bottom, Under them every one, Went golden stars in the water, All luminous with the sun. But the bubbles broke on the surface, And under, the stars of gold Broke; and the hurrying water Flowed onward, swift and cold. II. I stood on the brink in manhood, And it came to my weary brain, And my heart, so dull and heavy After the years of pain,–– 30 That every hollowest bubble Which over my life had passed Still into its deeper current Some heavenly gleam had cast; That, however I mocked it gayly, And guessed at its hollowness, Still shone, with each bursting bubble, One star in my soul the less.

31

LOST BELIEFS.

One after one they left us; The sweet birds out of our breasts Went flying away in the morning: Will they come again to their nests? Will they come again at nightfall, With God’s breath in their song? Noon is fierce with the heats of summer, And summer days are long! O my Life, with thy upward liftings, Thy downward-striking roots, Ripening out of thy tender blossoms But hard and bitter fruits!–– In thy boughs there is no shelter For the birds to seek again. The desolate nest is broken And torn with storms and rain!