Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Night-Wind by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Night-Wind

    By Madison Julius Cawein



I.

    I have heard the wind on a winter's night,
    When the snow-cold moon looked icily through
    My window's flickering firelight,
    Where the frost his witchery drew:
    I have heard the wind on a winter's night,
    Wandering ways that were frozen white,
    Wail in my chimney-flue:
    And its voice was the voice, so it seemed to me,
    The voice of the world's vast misery.

II.

    I have heard the wind on a night of spring,
    When the leaves unclasped their girdles of gold,
    And the bird on the bough sang slumbering,
    In the lilac's fragrant fold:
    I have heard the wind on a night of spring,
    Shaking the musk from its dewy wing,
    Sigh in my garden old:
    And it seemed that it said, as it sighed above,
    "I am the voice of the Earth's great love."

III.

    I have heard the wind on a night of fall,
    When a devil's-dance was the rain's down pour,
    And the wild woods reeled to its demon call,
    And the carpet fluttered the floor:
    I have heard the wind on a night of fall,
    Heaping the leaves by the garden wall,
    Weep at my close-shut door:
    And its voice, so it seemed, as it sorrowed there,
    Was the old, old voice of the world's despair.

IV.

    I have heard the wind on a summer night,
    When the myriad stars stormed heaven with fire,
    And the moon-moth glimmered in phantom flight,
    And the crickets creaked in choir:
    I have heard the wind on a summer night,
    Rocking the red rose and the white,
    Murmur in bloom and brier:
    And its voice was the voice, so it seemed to me,
    Of Earth's primordial mystery.



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