Poems (Cary)/The Reclaiming of the Angel

THE RECLAIMING OF THE ANGEL.
Oh smiling land of the sunset,How my heart to thy beauty thrills—Veiled dimly to-day with the shadowOf the greenest of all thy hills!Where daisies lean to the sunshine,And the winds a plowing go,And break into shining furrowsThe mists in the vale below;Where the willows hang out their tassels,With the dews all white and cold,Strung over their wands so limber,Like pearls upon chords of gold;Where in milky hedges of hawthornThe red-winged thrushes sing,And the wild vine, bright and flaunting,Twines many a scarlet ring;Where, under the ripened billowsOf the silver-flowing rye,We ran in and out with the zephyrs—My sunny-haired brother and I.
Oh, when the green kirtle of May time,Again over the hill-tops is blown, I shall walk the wild paths of the forestAnd climb the steep headlands alone—Pausing not where the slopes of the meadowsAre yellow with cowslip beds,Nor where, by the wall of the garden,The hollyhocks lift their bright heads.In hollows that dimple the hill-sides,Our feet till the sunset had been,Where pinks with their spikes of red blossoms,Hedged beds of blue violets in,While to the warm lip of the sunbeamThe cheek of the blush rose inclined,And the pansy's soft bosom was flushed withThe murmurous love of the wind.
But when 'neath the heavy tressesThat swept o'er the dying day,The star of the eve like a loverWas hiding his blushes away,As we came to a mournful riverThat flowed to a lovely shore,"Oh, sister," he said, "I am weary—I cannot go back any more!"And seeing that round about himThe wings of the angels shone—I parted the locks from his foreheadAnd kissed him and left him alone.