Sunday, April 25, 2021

April Snow / Pearl Andelson Sherry


April Snow

from From a Bay-window

Oh, your words are bitter to me
As these last flakes of snow are
To the little shining buds; but no bud
That glistens like a raindrop on a tree
Is so fresh with love.

~~
Pearl Andelson Sherry (1899-1966)
from Poetry, December 1921

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada and the United States]
Mattwj2002, Snow outside Minneapolis April, 18, 2013. CC BY-SA, Wikimedia Commons 

Pearl Andelson Sherry biography

Saturday, April 24, 2021

Love like an April day beguiles / James Bland Burges


Love like an April day beguiles

Love like an April day beguiles,
      Each moment brings new changes;
From cold to heat, from frowns to smiles,
      Capriciously he ranges.
Now he allures to mirth and joy,
      And points to scenes of pleasure;
But, ere we reach them, the false boy
      Bears off the promis'd treasure.

~~
James Bland Burges (1752-1824)

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

Sunday, April 18, 2021

April: A pastoral poem / William Perfect


April: A pastoral poem

Stern winter no longer prevails,
His brow of severity bends,
The snow is dissolv'd in the vales,
The north all his fury suspends:
The stream, late so turbid and full,
Innundation pour'd over its mound;
Now limpid and slow to the pool,
Its waters glide peaceably down.

The blest revolution appears,
It comes on the wings of the breeze;
Yon cloud that dissolves into tears,
Expands the green robe of the trees.
The daisy bestuds the fresh plain,
The cowslip diffuses perfume,
The Graces, a beautiful train,
Revive in the season of bloom.

From the fir, in the midst of the grove,
The stock-dove, in passionate lay,
Pours melting effusions of love,
As opens or closes the day.
The blackbird is up with the morn,
To serenade enters the bush;
Whilst music more shrill, from the thorn,
Proclaims the delight of the thrush.

Does the east brighten wide with the dawn?
The lark from her pillow of green
Ascends from dew-spangled lawn,
Ambitiously rising is seen.
In vain do we follow her flight,
She mocks the pursuit of our eyes,
And sings from so distant a height,
She seems invelop'd in the skies.

How mutual's the toil of the day,
The rook and his loud-cawing mate,
The architect's labour display,
In skill most amazingly great;
Enfork'd in the elms lofty spray,
The branches intwisting among,
In cradle compacted of clay,
Securely they pillow their young.

The chaffinch, mechanic, whose art,
Ye warblers, you can excel,
Where the sprays in a thicket dispart,
Has finished her gray-mossy cell.
Without how enamell'd it seems,
How elegant, artful, and round,
Instudded as brilliant it beams,
A brilliant where sparkles abound.

The wren, of rotundity fond,
Her Ranelagh pins to the wall,
To the pollard that bends on the pond,
Or the thatch that projects from the stall.
Ye feather'd musicians of spring,
Your nests may no danger annoy;
O may the fatigue of your wing,
Your broodlings mature into joy.

What blessings the rustics await,
The season they hail with a smile!
How happy's the husbandman's fate!
Content is the offspring of toil.
At night, from the labour of day,
The faithful delight of his heart,
Meets her lord on his long-custom'd way,
The raptures of truth to impart.

Ye much-envied scenes of repose,
Dear sylvan-sequester'd retreats,
Where innocence shields from the woes
Attendant on luxury's seats.
Here Nature's thy throne, and behold,
In the cot, on the verge of the dell,
Tho' the roof is not fretted with gold,
Thy virtues, Simplicity, dwell.

The morning's first visit attend,
Shall we watch for Aurora's first beam,
Then, Celadon, shall we, my friend,
Purloin from the stores of the stream.
Afar from the clack of the mill,
We'll stray to the head of the brook,
Or shall we curve round with the rill,
And practise the wiles of the hook.

The trout in his moss-fashion'd bed,
Observe all his gay-speckled pride,
How bright are his patches of red,
Live rubies that bleed in the tide!
Shall he bask in his sun-courted ray,
Still tenant his oozy recess,
Clash the current disporting in play,
Or shall we his pastime distress?

Ah, no, your more delicate breast
Forbids an enjoyment to gain,
Forbids any pleasure to rest,
Which flows from inflicting a pain.
Let others illusion design,
We'll scorn th' unwary to cheat,
Surrender the rod and the line,
And spurn from amusement deceit.

Your muse shall the season declare,
Your muse, not the least of the nine,
And pardon, should I for a share
Attempt your soft essays to join.
To Pan let us offer the song,
Perchance he may favour the lay,
Which serves the sweet theme to prolong,
For April's the mother of May.

~~
William Perfect (1737-1809)
from 
Sentimental Magazine, May 1774

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

William Perfect biography

Saturday, April 17, 2021

The Plow / Raymond Holden


The Plow

I thought the white patch on the Eastern hill
Was surely snow. I watched it and it stirred,
And even the drifted uplands lost the chill
They had been blowing downward and a bird
Flashed blue and there were others which I heard.

The patch of snow moved with a man behind,
And furrows on the hillside rippled brown.
The Winter went like water from my mind
And the misty April sun came faintly down
And I forgot the road which leads to town.

I was not anything but one desire
To follow in the wake of the billowy blade
With wind and water and my kind of fire –
To cleave the fallow hillside and invade
Young earth and rise up glad and unafraid.

~~
Raymond Holden (1894-1972)
from Granite and Alabaster, 1922

[Poem is in the public domain in the United States]

Sunday, April 11, 2021

Barley Feed / AE Reiff


Barley Feed

There is a harvest in a cutting down,
In the shed blood of the speared hero,
There is a redding of the land
Before green graves under sod.
Gold the heroes of valor, gold,
Directed to heaven, not strangers,
Wise men, they leave a country,
Dropping like fruit from a tree.

I am rich in cultivation,
A soft plough, I rend the ground,
The grasses, the aired bodies,
Stir about the break of day.
No sparing of the vine nor branches,
So outstretched the whitened lances.
An ardent star across the lightening field
No trembling saw that lofty hill concealed.

First flowers on these mountains
My wealth, the treasured sun,
The purpled blades shed blood.
No piercéd then would not be pierced again.
Now earth, be made sweet by this barley feed.

~~
AE Reiff

[All rights reserved by the author - Used with permission]

Saturday, April 10, 2021

A Psalm of Spring / William Force Stead


A Psalm of Spring
 
Awake! O ye that sleep,
     For the sun and the winds awaken;
The Day-Star breathes in the East,
     And the leaves of the vine are shaken.

The world was heavy at heart,
     She abode in the ways of Sorrow,
But Winter yieldeth to Spring,
     And the long night unto the morrow.

Arise! ye that mourn,
     O ye with the sorrowful faces.
For Joy hath come to the world
     From her hidden and innermost places.

The Lord hath made thee a sign,
     Yea, God affordeth a token:
The hills that were bare are green,
     For the Lord to the hills hath spoken.

~~
William Force Stead (1884-1967)
from Windflowers: A book of lyrics, 1911

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada and the United States]

William Force Stead biography

Sunday, April 4, 2021

Easter Night / Alice Meynell


Easter Night

All night had shout of men and cry
Of woeful women filled His way;
Until that noon of sombre sky
On Friday, clamour and display
Smote Him; no solitude had He,
No silence, since Gethsemane.

Public was Death; but Power, but Might,
But Life again, but Victory,
Were hushed within the dead of night,
The shutter’d dark, the secrecy.
And all alone, alone, alone
He rose again behind the stone.

~~
Alice Meynell
from A Father of Women, and other poems, 1917 

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada, the United States, and the European Union]

Alice Meynell biography

Saturday, April 3, 2021

An Easter Canticle / Charles Hanson Towne


An Easter Canticle

In every trembling bud and bloom
     That cleaves the earth, a flowery sword,
I see Thee come from out the tomb,
     Thou risen Lord.

In every April wind that sings
     Down lanes that make the heart rejoice;
Yea, in the word the wood-thrush brings,
     I hear Thy voice.

Lo ! every tulip is a cup
     To hold Thy morning's brimming wine;
Drink, O my soul, the wonder up
     Is it not thine?

The great Lord God, invisible,
     Hath roused to rapture the green grass;
Through sunlit mead and dew-drenched dell
     I see Him pass.

~~
Charles Hanson Towne (1877-1949) 
from The Quiet Singer, and other poems, 1908

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada, the United States, and the European Union]

Charles Hanson Towne biography

Thursday, April 1, 2021

Penny's Top 20 / March 2021

 

Penny's Top 20

The most-visited poems on  The Penny Blog in March 2021:

  1.  Craving for Spring, D.H. Lawrence
  2.  Esthetique du Mal, Wallace Stevens
  4.  March, William Cullen Bryant
  5.  Dear March - Come in, Emily Dickinson
  6.  The Winds, William Carlos Williams
  7.  March Morning in Canada, William Wilfred Campbell
  8.  March Thought, Hilda Conkling
  9.  March: A pastoral poem, William Perfect
10.  The World's Body, AE Reiff

11.  Spring, George J. Dance
12.  Sonnet 1977, Will Dockery
13.  Skating, William Wordsworth
14.  Large Red Man Reading, Wallace Stevens 
15.  The Branch, AE Reiff
16.  The stars are glittering in the frosty sky, Charles Heavysege
17.  The Day, Theodore Spencer
18.  Penny, or Penny's Hat, George J. Dance
19.  Winter Song, Elizabeth Tollet
20. Winter Uplands, Archibald Lampman

Source: Blogger, "Stats"