The Hollow

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I.

  Fleet swallows soared and darted
  'Neath empty vaults of blue;
  Thick leaves close clung or parted
  To let the sunlight through;
  Each wild rose, honey-hearted,
  Bowed full of living dew.


  II.

  Down deep, fair fields of Heaven,
  Beat wafts of air and balm,
  From southmost islands driven
  And continents of calm;
  Bland winds by which were given
  Hid hints of rustling palm.


  III.

  High birds soared high to hover;
  Thick leaves close clung to slip;
  Wild rose and snowy clover
  Were warm for winds to dip,
  And one ungentle lover,
  A bee with robber lip.


  IV.

  Dart on, O buoyant swallow!
  Kiss leaves and willing rose!
  Whose musk the sly winds follow,
  And bee that booming goes;--
  But in this quiet hollow
  I'll walk, which no one knows.


  V.

  None save the moon that shineth
  At night through rifted trees;
  The lonely flower that twineth
  Frail blooms that no one sees;
  The whippoorwill that pineth;
  The sad, sweet-swaying breeze;


  VI.

  The lone white stars that glitter;
  The stream's complaining wave;
  Gray bats that dodge and flitter;
  Black crickets hid that rave;
  And me whose life is bitter,
  And one white head stone grave.

© Madison Julius Cawein