April airs : a book of New England lyrics / Bliss Carman [electronic text]
About this Item
Title
April airs : a book of New England lyrics / Bliss Carman [electronic text]
Author
Carman, Bliss, 1861-1929
Publication
Boston, Mass.: Snall, Maynard and Company
1920
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"April airs : a book of New England lyrics / Bliss Carman [electronic text]." In the digital collection American Verse Project. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAE6137.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 15, 2025.
Pages
THE WEED'S COUNSEL.
SAID a traveller by the wayPausing, "What hast thou to say,Flower by the dusty road,That would ease a mortal's load?"
Traveller, hearken unto me!I will tell thee how to seeBeauties in the earth and skyHidden from the careless eye.I will tell thee how to hearNature's music wild and clear,—Songs of midday and of darkSuch as many never mark,Lyrics of creation sungEver since the world was young.
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And thereafter thou shalt knowNeither weariness nor woe.
Thou shalt see the dawn unfoldArtistries of rose and gold,And the sunbeams on the seaDancing with the wind for glee.The red lilies of the moorsShall be torches on the floors,Where the field-lark lifts his cryTo rejoice the passer-by,In a wide world rimmed with blueLovely as when time was new.
And thereafter thou shalt fareLight of foot and free from care.
I will teach thee how to findLost enchantments of the mindAll about thee, never guessedBy indifferent unrest.Thy distracted thought shall learnPatience from the roadside fern,And a sweet philosophyFrom the flowering locust tree, —While thy heart shall not disdainThe consolation of the rain.
Not an acre but shall giveOf its strength to help thee live.
With the many-wintered sunShall thy hardy course be run.And the bright new moon shall beA lamp to thy felicity.
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When green-mantled spring shall comePast thy door with flute and drum,And when over wood and swampAutumn trails her scarlet pomp,No misgiving shalt thou know,Passing glad to rise and go.
So thy days shall be unrolledLike a wondrous cloth of gold.
When gray twilight with her starMakes a heaven that is not far,Touched with shadows and with dreams,Thou shalt hear the woodland streamsSinging through the starry nightHoly anthems of delight.So the ecstasy of earthShall refresh thee as at birth,And thou shalt arise each mornRadiant with a soul reborn.
And this wisdom of a dayNone shall ever take away.
What the secret, what the clewThe wayfarer must pursue?Only one thing he must haveWho would share these transports brave.Love within his heart must dwellLike a bubbling roadside well,For a spring to quicken thought,Else my counsel comes to naught.For without that quickening trustWe are less than roadside dust.
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This, O traveller, is my creed, —All the wisdom of the weed!
Then the traveller set his packOnce more on his dusty back,And trudged on for many a mileFronting fortune with a smile.
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