<h2><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>YELLOW CLOVER</h2>
<p class="poem">
Must I, who walk alone,<br/>
come on it still,<br/>
This Puck of plants<br/>
The wise would do away with,<br/>
The sunshine slants<br/>
To play with,<br/>
Our wee, gold-dusty flower, the yellow clover,<br/>
Which once in Parting for a time<br/>
That then seemed long,<br/>
Ere time for you was over,<br/>
We sealed our own?<br/>
Do you remember yet,<br/>
O Soul beyond the stars,<br/>
Beyond the uttermost dim bars<br/>
Of space,<br/>
Dear Soul, who found earth sweet,<br/>
Remember by love’s grace,<br/>
In dreamy hushes of the heavenly song,<br/>
How suddenly we halted in our climb,<br/>
Lingering, reluctant, up that farthest hill,<br/>
Stooped for the blossoms closest to our feet,<br/>
And gave them as a token<br/>
Each to Each,<br/>
In lieu of speech,<br/>
In lieu of words too grievous to be spoken,<br/>
Those little, gypsy, wondering blossoms wet<br/>
With a strange dew of tears?<br/>
<br/>
So it began,<br/>
This vagabond, unvalued yellow clover,<br/>
To be our tenderest language. All the years<br/>
It lent a new zest to the summer hours,<br/>
As each of us went scheming to surprise<br/>
The other with our homely, laureate flowers.<br/>
Sonnets and odes<br/>
Fringing our daily roads.<br/>
Can amaranth and asphodel<br/>
Bring merrier laughter to your eyes?<br/>
Oh, if the Blest, in their serene abodes,<br/>
Keep any wistful consciousness of earth,<br/>
Not grandeurs, but the childish ways of love,<br/>
Simplicities of mirth,<br/>
Must follow them above<br/>
With touches of vague homesickness that pass<br/>
Like shadows of swift birds across the grass.<br/>
Beneath some foreign arch of sky,<br/>
How many a time the rover<br/>
You or I,<br/>
For life oft sundered look from look,<br/>
And voice from voice, the transient dearth<br/>
Schooling my soul to brook<br/>
This distance that no messages may span,<br/>
Would chance<br/>
Upon our wilding by a lonely well,<br/>
Or drowsy watermill,<br/>
Or swaying to the chime of convent bell,<br/>
Or where the nightingales of old romance<br/>
With tragical contraltos fill<br/>
Dim solitudes of infinite desire;<br/>
And once I joyed to meet<br/>
Our peasant gadabout<br/>
A trespasser on trim, seigniorial seat,<br/>
Twinkling a saucy eye<br/>
As potentates paced by.<br/>
<br/>
Our golden cord! our soft, pursuing flame<br/>
From friendship’s altar fire!<br/>
How proudly we would pluck and tame<br/>
The dimpling clusters, mutinously gay!<br/>
How swiftly they were sent<br/>
Far, far away<br/>
On journeys wide,<br/>
By sea and continent,<br/>
Green miles and blue leagues over,<br/>
From each of us to each,<br/>
That so our hearts might reach,<br/>
And touch within the yellow clover,<br/>
Love’s letter to be glad about<br/>
Like sunshine when it came!<br/>
<br/>
My sorrow asks no healing; it is love;<br/>
Let love then make me brave<br/>
To bear the keen hurts of<br/>
This careless summertide,<br/>
Ay, of our own poor flower,<br/>
Changed with our fatal hour,<br/>
For all its sunshine vanished when you died;<br/>
Only white clover blossoms on your grave.<br/></p>
<p class="left">
KATHERINE LEE BATES</p>
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