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    DAY AND ANOTHER
    RICHARD G BADGER



    ONE DAY AND ANOTHER

    _A Lyrical Eclogue_




    ONE DAY &
    ANOTHER

    _A Lyrical Eclogue_

    MADISON CAWEIN

    THE LYRIC LIBRARY


    BOSTON
    RICHARD G BADGER & COMPANY
    (Incorporated)
    1901



    Copyright 1901 by
    RICHARD G BADGER & CO.
    (Incorporated)



    The poem herewith presented was first published some
    ten years ago in a volume entitled _Days and Dreams_.
    The original verses have been re-written throughout and
    extensively added to, making it comparatively a new poem.

    LAKEVIEW PRESS, SOUTH FRAMINGHAM, MASS.




    TO
    G. F. M.
    THIS VOLUME IS INSCRIBED IN MEMORY
    OF MANY DAYS.




    _What though I dreamed of mountain heights,
    Of peaks, the barriers of the world,
    Around whose tops the Northern Lights
    And tempests are unfurled._

    _Mine are the footpaths leading through
    Life's lowly fields and woods,--with rifts,
    Above, of heaven's Eden blue,--
    By which the violet lifts_

    _Its shy appeal; and holding up
    Its chaliced gold, like some wild wine,
    Along the hillside, cup on cup,
    Blooms bright the celandine._

    _Where soft upon each flowering stock
    The butterfly spreads damask wings;
    And under grassy loam and rock
    The cottage cricket sings._

    _Where overhead eve blooms with fire,
    In which the new moon bends her bow,
    And, arrow-like, one white star by her
    Burns through the afterglow._

    _I care not, so the sesame
    I find; the magic flower there,
    Whose touch unseals each mystery
    In water, earth and air._

    _That in the oak tree lets me hear
    Its heart's deep speech, its soul's wise words;
    And to my mind makes crystal clear
    The melodies of birds._

    _Why should I care, who live aloof
    Beyond the din of life and dust,
    While dreams still share my humble roof,
    And love makes sweet my crust?_




    ONE DAY AND ANOTHER

    _A Lyrical Eclogue_




    PART I

    LATE SPRING

    _The mottled moth at eventide
    Beats glimmering wings against the pane;
    The slow, sweet lily opens wide,
    White in the dusk like some dim stain;
    The garden dreams on every side
    And breathes faint scents of rain.
    Among the flowering stocks they stand:
    A crimson rose is in his hand._


    1

    _Outside her garden. He waits musing._

    Herein the dearness of her is;
    The thirty perfect days of June
    Made one, in maiden loveliness
    Were not more sweet to clasp and kiss,
    With love not more in tune.

    Ah me! I think she is too true,
    Too spiritual for life's rough way;
    For in her eyes her soul looks new--
    Two bluet blossoms, watchet-blue,
    Are not so pure as they.

    So good, so beautiful is she,
    So soft and white, so fond and fair,
    Sometimes my heart fears she may be
    Not long for me, and secretly
    A sister of the air.


    2

    _Dusk deepens. A whippoorwill calls._

    The whippoorwills are calling where
    The golden west is graying;
    "'Tis time," they say, "to meet him there--
    Why are you still delaying?

    "He waits you where the old beech throws
    Its gnarly shadow over
    Wood-violet and the bramble rose,
    Frail maiden-fern and clover.

    "Where elder and the sumach creep
    Above your garden's paling,
    Whereon at noon the lizards sleep
    Like lichens on the railing.

    "Come! ere the early rising moon's
    Gold floods the violet valleys;
    Where mists, like phantom picaroons
    Anchor their stealthy galleys.

    "Come! while the deepening amethyst
    Of dusk above is falling--
    'Tis

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