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Poem by Madison Julius Cawein


A Midsummer Day


The locust gyres; the heat intensifies'
The rain-crow croaks from hot-leafed tree to tree:
The butterfly, a flame-fleck, aimlessly
Droops down the air and knows not where it flies.
Beside the stream, whose bed in places
The small green heron flaps; the minnows flee:
And mid the blackberry-lilies, wasp and bee
Drowse where the cattle pant with half-closed eyes.
The Summer Day, like some tired labourer,
Lays down her burden here and sinks to rest,
The tan of toil upon her face and hands:
She dreams, and lo, the heavens over her
Unfold her dream: Along the boundless West
Rolls gold the harvest of the sunset's lands.



Madison Julius Cawein


Madison Julius Cawein's other poems:
  1. By the Summer Sea
  2. Moss and Fern
  3. Broken Music
  4. The Old Herb-Man
  5. Pagan


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