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Old
Spookses’ Pass, Malcolm’s Katie and Other
Poems
by
Isabella Valancy Crawford
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THE
CITY TREE.
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I
stand within the stony, arid town,
I gaze for ever on the narrow
street;
I hear for ever passing up and down,
The ceaseless tramp of feet.
I know no brotherhood with far-lock’d woods,
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Where
branches bourgeon from a kindred sap;
Where o’er moss’d roots, in cool, green
solitudes,
Small silver brooklets lap.
No em’rald vines creep wistfully to me,
And lay their tender fingers
on my bark;
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High
may I toss my boughs, yet never see
Dawn’s first most
glorious spark. [Page 155]
When to and fro my branches wave and sway,
Answ’ring the feeble
wind that faintly calls,
They kiss no kindred boughs but touch always
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The
stones of climbing walls.
My heart is never pierc’d with song of bird;
My leaves know nothing of
that glad unrest,
Which makes a flutter in the still woods heard,
When wild birds build a
nest.
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There never glance the eyes of violets up,
Blue into the deep splendour
of my green:
Nor falls the sunlight to the primrose cup,
My quivering leaves between.
Not mine, not mine to turn from soft delight
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Of
wood-bine breathings, honey sweet, and warm;
With kin embattl’d rear my glorious height
To greet the coming storm!
Not mine to watch across the free, broad plains
The whirl of stormy chorts
sweeping fast;
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The
level, silver lances of great rains,
Blown onward by the blast.
Not mine the clamouring tempest to defy,
Tossing the proud crest
of my dusky leaves:
Defender of small flowers that trembling lie
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Against
my barky greaves.
Not mine to watch the wild swan drift above,
Balanced on wings that could
not choose between
The wooing sky, blue as the eye of love,
And my own tender green.
[Page 156]
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And yet my branches spread, a kingly sight,
In the close prison of the
drooping air:
When sun-vex’d noons are at their fiery height,
My shade is broad, and there
Come city toilers, who their hour of ease
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Weave
out to precious seconds as they lie
Pillow’d on horny hands, to hear the breeze
Through my great branches
die.
I see no flowers, but as the children race
With noise and clamour through
the dusty street,
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I
see the bud of many an angel face—
I hear their merry feet.
No violets look up, but shy and grave,
The children pause and lift
their chrystal eyes
To where my emerald branches call and wave—
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to the mystic skies. [Page 157] |
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