章节大纲

  • All Round The Year by E. Nesbit and Caris Brooke

    ALL ROUND THE YEAR

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    All round the year the changing suns and rains

    Beat on men’s work—to wreck and to decay—

    But nature builds more perfectly than they,

    Her changing unchanged sea resists, remains.

    All round the year new flowers spring up to shew

    How gloriously life is more strong than death;

    And in our hearts are seeds of love and faith,

    Ah, sun and showers, be kind, and let them grow.

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    RESURGAM.

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    Swift pass the hours, or lengthened by our hearts

    Uncertain measurement of time,

    And when we dream the year has just awoke,

    We wake to find her in her prime.

    We sadden with the dying Autumn leaves,

    Yet falling seeds their promise bring;

    Through long dark Winter days we only wait

    A resurrection in the coming Spring.

    Within each hour the precious minutes lie

    Like seeds awaiting Spring’s first breath,

    God’s harvest-time shall show us if they bear

    The flowers of life or death.

    Caris Brooke.

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    Cold is the earth, the flowers below,

    Fearful of Winter’s hand, lie curled;

    But Spring will come again you know,

    And glorify the world.

    Dark is the night, no stars or moon;

    But at its blackest night is done;

    All after hastens to the noon,

    The triumph of the sun!

    And life is short, and love is brief—

    Be patient! There will be—they say

    New life, divine beyond belief,

    Somewhere, somehow, some day!

    E. Nesbit.

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    MARCH VIOLETS.

    This busy, dusty wind that blows

    Along the cruel streets,

    Right to the heart of violets goes,

    And robs them of their sweets.

    And as along the cruel street

    The keen wind robs the flowers,

    So the cold kindness that we meet

    Blights these poor hearts of ours.

    But if you tend with warmth, you know,

    Your violets, they give

    Sweet scent again, as if to show

    How glad they are to live.

    We think if some one loved us too

    Our hearts would break to prove

    By all that we could say or do,

    How glad we were to love!

    E. Nesbit.

    Dream footsteps wandering past us in our sleep,

    A restless presence stirring with the light,

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    The cry of waters where the snow was white,

    A violet’s whisper where dead leaves lay deep;

    The dim wood’s music makes a sudden leap,

    Broken notes, blending in a wild delight,

    And lo! the whole world changes in our sight.

    Promise is ended—we must turn and reap

    Fulfilment, for the Spring with all her wealth

    Is with us, and compels us to her will.

    Yet if the sun-dawn we should shun by stealth

    Yearning for shadows and the darkened hours,

    Sweet Lord, be pitiful, remembering still

    One lieth low beneath the budding flowers.

    Caris Brooke.

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    Never a hand on the cottage door

    To call me forth in the evening light,

    My days grow old, and I watch no more

    The cowslips gold and the may-buds white.

    Primroses nestle beneath the hedge

    Where we kissed and wept and said good-bye—

    For twenty years I have watched them bud,

    For twenty years I have seen them die.

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    Yet now that the Spring once more has turned

    The sea to silver, the earth to gold,

    I shall watch no more from the primrose lane,

    Where I waited and watched in the days of old.

    Yet the children weave me their daisy chains,

    The woodland music is sweet and clear,

    Though the footsteps have wandered beyond recall,

    That I watched and waited so long to hear!

    Caris Brooke.

    The swans along the water glide,

    Unfettered and yet side by side—

    So should true lovers ever be,

    Together ever—ever free.

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    A chain upon the white swan’s neck,

    What were it good for—save to break?

    And swans who wear and break a chain

    Swim never side by side again.

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    My best beloved, the Spring is fair,

    The woods are green and life is good,

    Come out with me and let us tread

    By field and fold and sweet wet wood—

    The wind-flower blanches all the copse,

    With hyacinth the hedge is blue,

    And every wakened leaf is fair,

    But not so fair as you!

    The black-birds sing on hazel boughs

    Beneath the overarching trees,

    The cuckoo’s distant song is borne

    Across the meadow by the breeze,

    The thrush’s song is sweetest far

    But saddens as the hours go by.

    You hear? The nightingale’s in love,

    But not so much as I!

    E. Nesbit.

    Girdled with gold my little lady’s bower

    Stands at the portals of a world in flower,

    And down her ways the changing blossoms mark

    How the Spring grows each day from dawn to dark.

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    When forth she moves, her dainty foot is set,

    On cowslip, hyacinth and violet,

    And all day long the woodland minstrels sing

    Changes of measure for her pleasuring.

    And all night long a passionate music stirs

    Without her walls—the darkened belt of firs;

    Hushed in their waving boughs the low winds brood,

    Murmuring the sea’s song for an interlude.

    Caris Brooke.

    The last bright relic of the moon’s full gold

    Burns on the swiftly flowing river’s breast;

    No sound but restless dipping of strong oars

    To break the charm of nature’s perfect rest.

    Far off the town’s faint mingled clamours stir,

    And through the silence of the nearer light

    The incense of the evening mist floats up—

    The day’s last lingering love-word to the night.

    A sudden shiver of regretful change

    Sighs through the whispering boughs that overhead

    Sway in the wind’s breath: down the red sun dips,

    And in the twilight’s arms the day lies dead.

    Then rain, and after, moonshine cold and fair,

    And scent of earth, sweet with the evening rain,

    And slow soft speech beneath the rain-washed trees,

    Ah, that such things should never come again!

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    Oh listening trees, where are the words we spoke?

    Where are our sighs, wind whom those sighs caressed?

    Oh! what a fate is ours, too swift, too sad,

    If such an hour goes by with all the rest!

    E. Nesbit.

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    What o’clock is it, children dear?

    Ask of the dandelions here!

    Blow, blow, blow, and away they go—

    But they do not tell us the time you know!

    Say, what month is it, children dear?

    We think it is August because we hear

    The swing of the sickle, restless and slow,

    And that’s a sign of the month, you know.

    Where are you going, children dear?

    Where the lane winds deep and the stream runs clear—

    There are plenty of beautiful ways to go—

    But only one way that two only know.

    Where are we going, children dear?

    To a beautiful country that’s very near,

    Hand in hand is the way to go

    Up into fairyland you know.

    E. Nesbit.

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    HOP PICKING.

    Ah me, how pleasant to go down

    From the forlorn and faded town

    To Kentish wood and fold and lane,

    And breathe God’s blessed air again;

    Where glorious yellow corn-fields blaze

    And nuts hang over woodland ways.

    To pick the sweet keen-scented hops,

    (See from each pole a dream-wreath drops)

    To toil all day in pure clear air,

    Laughter and sunshine everywhere—

    With reddening woods and sweet wet soil

    And well-earned rest and honest toil.

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    Where do we fly, under deep dark sky?

    Over the moors we go,

    Over the pool where quiet and cool

    Bulrush and sedges grow—

    And what was the loveliest thing we met?

    Ah—we forget!

    We remember though all the firelit glow

    Of a great hearth’s gleam and glare,

    And we looked for a space at each happy face

    And the love that was written there.

    And that, of all we have looked on yet—

    We least forget!

    Hallowe'en

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    Oh what a day! all yellow and gray,

    And so dark, so dreary, so foggy and thick,

    That if I should meet

    In the street

    My sweet—

    I might pass her by!

    Risk that? Not I!

    Take me home out of danger then! Quick, feet, quick.

    Not Summer’s crown of scent the red rose weaves

    Nor hawthorn blossom over bloom-strewn grass,

    Nor violet’s whisper when the children pass,

    Nor lilac perfume in the soft May eves,

    Nor new-mown hay, crisp scent of yellow sheaves,

    Nor any scent that Spring-time can amass

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    And Summer squander, such a magic has

    As scent of fresh wet earth and fallen leaves.

    For sometimes lovers in November days,

    When earth is grieving for the vanished sun,

    Have trod dead leaves in chill and wintry ways,

    And kissed and dreamed eternal Summer won;

    Look back, look back! through memories’ deepening haze,

    See—two who dreamed that dream, and you were one.

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    THE LOVER TO HIS LASS.

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    Dearest, the Winter is here!

    “It will be sad,” so you said,

    “When no green leaves overhead

    Shadow the paths where we tread!”

    I said “It still will be dear

    If we still meet,

    O my sweet!”

    See how the seasons are kind!

    See this December forget

    How to be weary and wet!

    Hardly our June I regret,

    Winter so comely I find

    Since you are here,

    O my dear!

    Sweetheart, I sometimes believe,

    Love, not the sun, makes us glad;

    Even the mists were not sad

    If your soft hand-clasp I had.

    Hearts sing, though skies mourn and grieve,

    All weather’s fair

    If you’re there!

    Someday a home there shall be,

    Love shall be sun of it, sweet!

    Joy shall be full and complete—

    Sound of small voices and feet;

    While, like the sunshine, for me,

    You light up life—

    You—my wife!

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    BEFORE PARTING.

    Now

     surely is the hour come for farewell,

    Now, with the lessened light and darkened days.

    Who now would tread the wild hill’s pathless ways?

    We found so fair when Spring and Summer’s spell

    Made blind our hearts this parting to foretell.

    Yet why, while wan and wintry sunlight stays

    On perished gold of Autumn fields, delays

    Your heart to speak, while both our hearts rebel?

    Together we have gathered through the year

    All that the year could give us of its best,

    Is it not meet our parting should be here,

    Now in the season drear of death and rest?

    Yet since together we its joys have known

    How shall each meet the strange New Year alone.

    Caris Brooke.

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    The End

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