The poems of Madison Cawein | ||
112
UNDER DARK SKIES
I
Hills rolled in woods, that lair the lynx and fox;Harsh fields, that lean before the woods' advance
As wild-men fly from hunters, tossing locks
Through which their eyes of yellow fire glance;
Great blurs of briers and lugubrious rocks,—
A bristling blackness,—with a pool beneath,
Whereo'er the wisps, like something evil, dance;
And then a house like the wrecked face of death.
II
There where the moon hangs sinister, o'er parchedAnd haggard thorns,—a golden battle-bow,
Or shield of bronze, old wars have scarred and scorched,—
113
Night only! Night, with flickering flame, who torched
That moment when blood branded black its sod,
And in the pool a ghastly face sank slow
Beneath the storm and rushing fire of God.
The poems of Madison Cawein | ||