Poems (Cary)/Annie Clayville

ANNIE CLAYVILLE.
In the bright'ning wake of AprilComes the lovely, lovely May,But the step of Annie ClayvilleFalleth fainter day by day.In despite of sunshine, shadowsLie upon her heart and brow:Last year she was gay and happy—Life is nothing to her now!
When she hears the wild bird singing,Or the sweetly humming bee,Only says she, faintly smiling,What have you to do with me?
Yet, sing out for pleasant weather,Wild birds in the woodland dells—Fly out, little bees, and gatherHoney for your waxen wells.Softly, sunlit rain of April,Come down singing from the clouds,Till the daffodils and daisiesShall be up in golden crowds;
Till the wild pinks hedge the meadows,Blushing out of slender stems,And the dandelions, starry,Cover all the hills with gems.From your cool beds in the rivers,Blow, fresh winds, and gladness bringTo the locks that wait to hide you—What have I to do with spring?
May is past—along the hollowsChime the rills in sleepy tune,While the harvest's yellow chapletSwings against the face of June.
Very pale lies Annie Clayville—Still her forehead, shadow-crowned,And the watchers hear her saying,As they softly tread around:Go out, reapers, for the hill topsTwinkle with the summer's heat—Lay from out your swinging cradlesGolden furrows of ripe wheat!While the little laughing children,Lightly mixing work with play,From between the long green winrowsGlean the sweetly-scented hay.Let your sickles shine like sunbeamsIn the silver-flowing rye,Ears grow heavy in the cornfields—That will claim you by and by. Go out, reapers, with your sickles,Gather home the harvest store!Little gleaners, laughing gleaners,I shall go with you no more.
Round the red moon of October,White and cold the eve-stars climb,Birds are gone, and flowers are dying—'Tis a lonesome, lonesome time.Yellow leaves along the woodlandSurge to drifts—the elm-bough sways,Creaking at the homestead windowAll the weary nights and days.Dismally the rain is falling—Very dismally and cold;Close, within the village graveyardBy a heap of freshest mould,With a simple, nameless headstone,Lies a low and narrow mound,And the brow of Annie ClayvilleIs no longer shadow crowned.Rest thee, lost one, rest thee calmly,Glad to go where pain is o'er—Where they say not, through the night-time,"I am weary," any more.