FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   >>  
e. Soft 'twixt thy capes like sunset's purple coves, Shallow the channel glides through silent oyster groves, Round Kent's ancient isle, and by beaches brown, Cleaving the fruity farms to slumb'rous Chestertown. Long ere the great bay bore the Baltimores, Yielded thy virgin tide to Virginian oars; Elsewhere the word went, "Multiply! increase!" Long ago thy destinies were perfect as thy peace. Still, like thy water-fowl, dearly do I yearn, In memory's migration once more to return, Where the dull old college from the gentle ridge, O'erlooks the sunny village, the river, and the bridge. On the pier decrepit I do loiter yet, With my crafty crab-lines and my homespun net, Till the silver fishes in pools of twilight swam, And stars played round my bait in the coves of calm. Sweet were the chinquapins growing by thy brink, Sweet the cool spring-water in the gourd to drink, Beautiful the lilies when the tide declined, As if night receding had left some stars behind. But when the peach tints vanished from the plain, Or struggled no longer the shad against the seine, Every reed in thy march into music stirred, And to gold it blossomed in a singing bird. Eden of water-fowl! clinging to thy dells Ages of mollusks have yielded their shells, While, like the exquisite spirits they shed, Ride the white swans in the surface o'erhead. Silent the otter, stealing by thy moon, Through the fluttered heron, hears the cry of the loon; Motionless the setter in thy dawnlight gray Shows the happy hidden cove where the wild duck play. Homely are thy boatmen, venturing no more In their dusky pungies than to Baltimore, Happy when the freshet from northern mountains sweeps, And strews the bay with lumber like wrecks upon the deeps. Not for thy homesteads of a former space, Not for thy folk of supposititious race; Something I love thee, river, for thy rest, More for my childhood buried in thy breast. From the mightier empire of the solid land, A pilgrim infrequent I seek thy fertile strand, And with a calm affection would wish my grave to be Where falls the Chester to the bay, the bay unto the sea. OLD WASHINGTON ALMSHOUSE. A stranger in Washington, looking down the wide outer avenue named "Massachusetts," which goes bowling from knol
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   >>  



Top keywords:
mollusks
 

yielded

 

shells

 

hidden

 

clinging

 

venturing

 

boatmen

 

singing

 

pungies

 
Homely

exquisite

 

fluttered

 

Through

 

surface

 

erhead

 

stealing

 

spirits

 
Motionless
 
setter
 
dawnlight

Silent

 

Chester

 

infrequent

 

fertile

 

strand

 

affection

 

WASHINGTON

 

ALMSHOUSE

 
Massachusetts
 

bowling


avenue
 
Washington
 

stranger

 
pilgrim
 
wrecks
 
blossomed
 

homesteads

 

lumber

 
strews
 
freshet

northern
 

mountains

 

sweeps

 
supposititious
 
breast
 

buried

 

mightier

 

empire

 

childhood

 

Something