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Poem by Madison Julius Cawein


Creole Serenade


Under mossy oak and pine
Whispering falls the fountained stream;
In its pool the lilies shine
Silvery, each a moonlight gleam.

Roses bloom and roses die
In the warm rose-scented dark,
Where the firefly, like an eye,
Winks and glows, a golden spark.

Amber-belted through the night
Swings the alabaster moon,
Like a big magnolia white
On the fragrant heart of June.

With a broken syrinx there,
With bignonia overgrown,
Is it Pan in hoof and hair,
Or his image carved from stone?

See! her casement's jessamines part,
And, with starry blossoms blent,
Like the moon she leans O heart,
'Tis another firmament.



Madison Julius Cawein


Madison Julius Cawein's other poems:
  1. Response
  2. Elfin
  3. On the Hilltop
  4. La Beale Isoud
  5. Foreword to Weeds by the Wall


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