Rolling Stones/The Pewee

POEMS

[This and the other poems that follow have been found in files of The Rolling Stone, in the Houston Post’s Postscripts and in manuscript. There are many others, but these few have been selected rather arbitrarily, to round out this collection.]


THE PEWEE

In the hush of the drowsy afternoon,
When the very wind on the breast of June
Lies settled, and hot white tracery
Of the shattered sunlight filters free
Through the unstinted leaves to the pied cool sward;
On a dead tree branch sings the saddest bard
   Of the birds that be;
   ’Tis the lone Pewee.
It’s note is a sob, and it’s note is pitched
In a single key, like a soul bewitched
   To a mournful minstrelsy.

“Pewee, Pewee,” doth it ever cry;
a sad, sweet minor threnody
That threads the aisles of the dim hot grove
Like a tale of a wrong or a vanished love;
And the fancy comes that the wee dun bird
Perchance was a maid, and her heart was stirred
   By some lover’s rhyme
   In a golden time,
And broke when the world turned false and cold;
And her dreams grew dark and her faith grew cold
   In some fairy far-off clime.

And her soul crept into the Pewee’s breast;
And forever she cries with a strange unrest
For something lost, in the afternoon;
For something missed from the lavish June;
For the heart that died in the long ago;
For the livelong pain that pierceth so:
   Thus the Pewee cries,
   While the evening lies
Steeped in the languorous still sunshine,
Rapt, to the leaf and the bough and the vine
   Of some hopeless paradise.