On the Prairie - Birdly Poetry
On the Prairie.
- The world grows beautiful. Each morn I look
- Out of my window on some beauty born
- In the still night. Where late the swift fires ran.
- Making a glory of the dead, dry grass,
- To-day there smiles a fresh growth of green
- That I could fall upon my knees and bless,
- It is so sweet and restful to the sight
- It is so sweet and restful to the soul.
- I see the sun rise in the earth's far edge,
- And, unobscured at night, go down beyond
- Its utmost rim; no city's lights to mar
- The perfect picture, and no city's din
- To break the silence that unto the soul
- That listens, hath a thousand messages
- That sound knows not.
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- The sky bends low
- And clasps the dear earth in a warm embrace,
- And the glad earth smiles back its promises
- Of beauty yet to be. A little while,
- And on the brook's edge there will come again
- Familiar sights; on its glad breast will rock
- The water-lilies those white thoughts of God
- And by-and-by strange little tufts of grass,
- Between which and the meadow lark there is
- A small, sweet secret, will grow glad with song.
- And later still Nature if prodigal
- The "tides of grass will break in foam of flowers."
- Year after year our eyes have seen the same
- Entrancing marvel; leaf and bud and flower,
- The music of the happy streams and birds,
- And yet each year it is as strange and new,
- As though it were the first. And so I pray
- That when my heart shall cease to thrill with joy
- At all the solemn, tender, happy sights,
- At all the myriad little whispered sounds,
- Of the young year, that it may cease to beat.
- Carlotta Perry.
- Milwaukee, July 8.
July 11, 1885. Hyde Park (Illinois) Herald 4(28): 2.