Trailing Clouds.The trailing clouds hang low; Their misty folds drag slow O'er the ground; And the rain makes, as it falls On the roof and on the walls, Scarce a sound. I sit and idly dream, While the rain-drops drip and stream From the eaves; And memory's folded book Slowly opens, and I look Through the leaves. I cannot see the town, Nor the prairies, yellow-brown, Through the mist; But these pages, blurred with years, I can read them through my tears, When I list. I see here as I look Through the pages of the book,___ Flinching not,- Gray shadows, glints of sun; Lost battles, battles won; Woman's lot. Green paths, with sunshine sweet; Rough steeps, to aid my feet; Broken staves; Love's rapture, wildly throbbing, The grief, as wildly sobbing Over graves. Must ill all good alloy? Will sorrow, chasing joy, Never rest? Ah, why the bitter-sweet? And wily the bleeding feet? God knows best. Listen! A tolling bell Sobs out its mournful knell Over there; And I know that hearts are aching___ Perhaps some heart is breaking___ Over there. At last, the clouds are lifted, And sunset gold is sifted To the plain. Oh, peace for those who grieve! May it come like light at eve After rain. __Ellen P. Allerton. |
Walls of Corn and Other Poems
Ellen P. Allerton
(Hiawatha, KS: Harrington Printing Company. 1894)
Pages 137-138
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