Skip directly to:
Main content
Main navigation
University of Virginia Library
Search this document
New poems by Madison Cawein
Cawein, Madison Julius (1865-1914)
THE MISTY MID-REGION
HESPERIAN
‘THAT NIGHT WHEN I CAME TO THE GRANGE’
THE ANGEL WITH THE BOOK
DREAM ROAD
THE PLACE
THE ROAD
THE OLD LANE
A FOREST CHILD
IN THE WOOD
GARDEN GOSSIP
THE OLD GATE MADE OF PICKETS
APRILIAN
A GHOST AND A DREAM
TRAMPS
LILITH'S LOVER
WITCHERY
THE FOREST WAY
HYLAS
THE WOOD THRUSH
ONE WHO LOVED NATURE
AVALON
THE YARROW
MIDSUMMER
WILLOW WOOD
ATTRIBUTES
A SONG OF THE ROAD
THE LESSON
VOICES
RAINLESS
AFTER AUTUMN RAIN
SEASONS
GARDEN AND GARDENER
A PRAYER FOR OLD AGE
THE SHADOW
NIGHT AND RAIN
HAUNTERS OF THE SILENCE
SOUNDS AND SIGHTS
FROST IN MAY
IN THE STORM
1.
I
2.
II
ROSE AND LEAF
‘SOME RECKON TIME BY STARS’
DRAGON-SEED
LINCOLN
POE
MRS. BROWNING
IN OLD NEW ENGLAND
THE NORTH SHORE
GIPSIES
WITH THE WIND
WOOD MYTHS
BY THE ANNISQUAM
GAMMER GAFFER
SILHOUETTES AND SONNETS
RIDERS IN THE NIGHT
MASKS
THE RAID
THE RENDEZVOUS
IN BLACK AND RED
AN EPISODE
[There was a man rode into town one day]
[They said he'd sold tobacco; and he knew]
THE FEUD
ITS BEGINNING
THE END
THE MOUNTAIN-STILL
THE MOONSHINER
THE SHERIFF
IN THE MOUNTAINS
LAND-MARKS
THE OX-TEAM
SONG OF THE NIGHT-RIDERS
THE TOWN WITCH
THE VILLAGE MISER
THE INFANTICIDE
THE HERB-GATHERER
THE RAG-PICKER
THE BOY IN THE RAIN
TREES
CONSECRATION
[This is the place where visions come to dance]
[Here is the place where Lovliness keeps house]
[The road winds upward under whispering trees]
[Keep it, O dim recorders of grey years]
THE GOLDEN HOUR
OUR DREAMS
DROUTH
PREMONITION
AFTER A NIGHT OF RAIN
A MIDSUMMER DAY
THE CLOSE OF SUMMER
MUTATIS MUTANDIS
THE FOOL
THE SCARECROW
SERVICE
THE APE
THE PESSIMIST
AN INCIDENT
VINDICATION
TREASURE
THE ASS
THE CABBAGE
THE CRIMINAL
DEATH AND THE FOOL
THE BAGPIPE
THE OX
THE GOOSE
THE BEAST
THE OWL
THE TOAD
THE CRICKET
THE TORRENT
Collapse All
|
Expand All
New poems by Madison Cawein
New poems by Madison Cawein
Madison Julius Cawein
1865-1914
Grant Richards
London
1909
New poems by Madison Cawein