Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Old Lane by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Old Lane

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    An old, lost lane; where can it lead?
    To stony pastures, where the weed
    Purples its plume, or sails its seed:
    And from one knoll, the vetch makes green,
    Trailing its glimmering ribbon on,
    Under deep boughs, a creek is seen,
    Flecked with the silver of the dawn.

    An old, green lane; where can it go?
    Into the valley-land below,
    Where red the wilding lilies blow:
    Where, under willows, shadowy grey,
    The blue-crane wades, the heron glides;
    And in each pool the minnows sway,
    Twinkling their slim and silvery sides.

    An old, railed lane; where does it end?
    Beyond the log-bridge at the bend,
    Towards which our young feet used to wend:
    Where, 'neath a dappled sycamore,
    The old mill thrashed its foaming wheel,
    And, smiling, at its corn-strewn door
    The miller leant all white with meal.

    An old, wild lane; I know it well:
    The creek, the bridge across the dell:
    The old house on the orchard-swell:
    The pine-board porch above the creek,
    Where oft we used to sit and dream,
    Two children, fair of hair and cheek,
    Dropping our flowers in the stream.

    An old, old lane; I follow it
    In fancy; and, where branches knit,
    Behold a boy and girl who sit
    Beside the mill-dam near the mill;
    Or in a flat-boat, old and worn,
    Oar lilyward. I see them still
    Her dress is rent, his trousers torn.

    An old, lost lane. Come, let us find,
    As here I have it in my mind,
    As boyhood left it far behind!
    Yes; let us follow it again,
    And meet her, wild of foot and hair,
    The tomboy, sweet as sun and rain,
    Whom once we worshipped to despair.



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