Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Madison Julius Cawein > Text of Hillside Grave
|
|
________________________________________________
Title: The Hillside Grave
Author: Madison Julius Cawein [ More Titles by Cawein]
Ten-hundred deep the drifted daisies break Here at the hill's foot; on its top, the wheat Hangs meagre-bearded; and, in vague retreat, The wisp-like blooms of the moth-mulleins shake. And where the wild-pink drops a crimson flake, And morning-glories, like young lips, make sweet The shaded hush, low in the honeyed heat, The wild-bees hum; as if afraid to wake One sleeping there; with no white stone to tell The story of existence; but the stem Of one wild-rose, towering o'er brier and weed, Where all the day the wild-birds requiem; Within whose shade the timid violets spell An epitaph, only the stars can read.
[The end] Madison Julius Cawein's poem: Hillside Grave ________________________________________________
GO TO TOP OF SCREEN
|