The poems of Madison Cawein | ||
10
THE SWEET O' THE YEAR
I
How can I help from laughing, whileThe daffodillies at me smile?
The dancing dew winks tipsily
In clusters of the lilac-tree,
And crocus' mouths and hyacinths'
Storm through the grassy labyrinths
A mirth of pearl and violet;
While roses, bud by bud,
Laugh from each dainty-lacing net
Red lips of maidenhood.
II
How can I help from singing whenThe swallow and the hawk again
Are noisy in the hyaline
Of happy heavens, clear as wine?
The robin, lustily and shrill,
Pipes on the timber-belted hill;
11
Mad orioles that glow
Like shining shafts of ingot gold
Shot from the morning's bow.
III
How can I help from loving, dear,Since love is of the sweetened year?—
The very insects feel his power,
And chirr and chirrup hour on hour;
The bee and beetle in the noon,
The cricket underneath the moon:—
What else to do but follow too,
Since youth is on the wing,
Lord Life who follows through the dew
Lord Love a-carolling.
The poems of Madison Cawein | ||