I
WHEN
the
pine
tosses
its
cones
To
the
song
of
its
waterfall
tones,
Who
speeds
to
the
woodland
walks?
To
birds
and
trees
who
talks?
Cæsar
of
his
leafy
Rome,
There
the
poet
is
at
home.
He
goes
to
the
river-side,—
Not
hook
nor
line
hath
he;
He
stands
in
the
meadows
wide,—
Nor
gun
nor
scythe
to
see.
Sure
some
god
his
eye
enchants:
What
he
knows
nobody
wants.
In
the
wood
he
travels
glad,
Without
better
fortune
had,
Melancholy
without
bad.
Knowledge
this
man
prizes
best
Seems
fantastic
to
the
rest:
Pondering
shadows,
colors,
clouds,
Grass-buds
and
caterpillar-shrouds,
Boughs
on
which
the
wild
bees
settle,
Tints
that
spot
the
violet's
petal,
Why
Nature
loves
the
number
five,
And
why
the
star-form
she
repeats:
Lover
of
all
things
alive,
Wonderer
at
all
he
meets,
Wonderer
chiefly
at
himself,
Who
can
tell
him
what
he
is?
Or
how
meet
in
human
elf
Coming
and
past
eternities?
2
And
such
I
knew,
a
forest
seer,
A
minstrel
of
the
natural
year,
Foreteller
of
the
vernal
ides,
Wise
harbinger
of
spheres
and
tides,
A
lover
true,
who
knew
by
heart
Each
joy
the
mountain
dales
impart;
It
seemed
that
Nature
could
not
raise
A
plant
in
any
secret
place,
In
quaking
bog,
on
snowy
hill,
Beneath
the
grass
that
shades
the
rill,
Under
the
snow,
between
the
rocks,
In
damp
fields
known
to
bird
and
fox.
But
he
would
come
in
the
very
hour
It
opened
in
its
virgin
bower,
As
if
a
sunbeam
showed
the
place,
And
tell
its
long-descended
race.
It
seemed
as
if
the
breezes
brought
him,
It
seemed
as
if
the
sparrows
taught
him;
As
if
by
secret
sight
he
knew
Where,
in
far
fields,
the
orchis
grew.
Many
haps
fall
in
the
field
Seldom
seen
by
wishful
eyes,
But
all
her
shows
did
Nature
yield,
To
please
and
win
this
pilgrim
wise.
He
saw
the
partridge
drum
in
the
woods;
He
heard
the
woodcock's
evening
hymn;
He
found
the
tawny
thrushes'
broods;
And
the
shy
hawk
did
wait
for
him;
What
others
did
at
distance
hear,
And
guessed
within
the
thicket's
gloom,
Was
shown
to
this
philosopher,
And
at
his
bidding
seemed
to
come.
3
In
unploughed
Maine
he
sought
the
lumberers'
gang
Where
from
a
hundred
lakes
young
rivers
sprang;
He
trod
the
unplanted
forest
floor,
whereon
The
all-seeing
sun
for
ages
hath
not
shone;
Where
feeds
the
moose,
and
walks
the
surly
bear,
And
up
the
tall
mast
runs
the
woodpecker.
He
saw
beneath
dim
aisles,
in
odorous
beds,
The
slight
Linnæa
hang
its
twin-born
heads,
And
blessed
the
monument
of
the
man
of
flowers,
Which
breathes
his
sweet
fame'through
the
northern
bowers.
He
heard,
when
in
the
grove,
at
intervals,
With
sudden
roar
the
aged
pine-tree
falls,—
One
crash,
the
death-hymn
of
the
perfect
tree,
Declares
the
close
of
its
green
century.
Low
lies
the
plant
to
whose
creation
went
Sweet
influence
from
every
element;
Whose
living
towers
the
years
conspired
to
build,
Whose
giddy
top
the
morning
loved
to
gild.
Through
these
green
tents,
by
eldest
Nature
dressed,
He
roamed,
content
alike
with
man
and
beast.
Where
darkness
found
him
he
lay
glad
at
night;
There
the
red
morning
touched
him
with
its
light.
Three
moons
his
great
heart
him
a
hermit
made,
So
long
he
roved
at
will
the
boundless
shade.
The
timid
it
concerns
to
ask
their
way,
And
fear
what
foe
in
caves
and
swamps
can
stray,
To
make
no
step
until
the
event
is
known,
And
ills
to
come
as
evils
past
bemoan.
Not
so
the
wise;
no
coward
watch
he
keeps
To
spy
what
danger
on
his
pathway
creeps;
Go
where
he
will,
the
wise
man
is
at
home,
His
hearth
the
earth,—his
hall
the
azure
dome;
Where
his
clear
spirit
leads
him,
there's
his
road
By
God's
own
light
illumined
and
foreshowed.
4
'T
was
one
of
the
charmèd
days
When
the
genius
of
God
doth
flow;
The
wind
may
alter
twenty
ways,
A
tempest
cannot
blow;
It
may
blow
north,
it
still
is
warm;
Or
south,
it
still
is
clear;
Or
east,
it
smells
like
a
clover-farm;
Or
west,
no
thunder
fear.
The
musing
peasant,
lowly
great,
Beside
the
forest
water
sate;
The
rope-like
pine-roots
crosswise
grown
Composed
the
network
of
his
throne;
The
wide
lake,
edged
with
sand
and
grass,
Was
burnished
to
a
floor
of
glass,
Painted
with
shadows
green
and
proud
Of
the
tree
and
of
the
cloud.
He
was
the
heart
of
all
the
scene;
On
him
the
sun
looked
more
serene;
To
hill
and
cloud
his
face
was
known,—
It
seemed
the
likeness
of
their
own;
They
knew
by
secret
sympathy
The
public
child
of
earth
and
sky.
'You
ask,'
he
said,'what
guide
Me
through
trackless
thickets
led,
Through
thick-stemmed
woodlands
rough
and
wide.
I
found
the
water's
bed.
The
watercourses
were
my
guide;
I
travelled
grateful
by
their
side,
Or
through
their
channel
dry;
They
led
me
through
the
thicket
damp,
Through
brake
and
fern,
the
beavers'
camp,
Through
beds
of
granite
cut
my
road,
And
their
resistless
friendship
showed.
The
falling
waters
led
me,
The
foodful
waters
fed
me,
And
brought
me
to
the
lowest
land
Unerring
to
the
ocean
sand.
The
moss
upon
the
forest
bark
Was
pole-star
when
the
night
was
dark;
The
purple
berries
in
the
wood
Supplied
me
necessary
food;
For
Nature
ever
faithful
is
To
such
as
trust
her
faithfulness.
When
the
forest
shall
mislead
me,
When
the
night
and
morning
lie,
When
sea
and
land
refuse
to
feed
me,
'T
will
be
time
enough
to
die;
Then
will
yet
my
mother
yield
A
pillow
in
her
greenest
field,
Nor
the
June
flowers
scorn
to
cover
The
clay
of
their
departed
lover.'
II
As
sunbeams
stream
through
liberal
space
And
nothing
jostle
or
displace,
So
waved
the
pine-tree
through
my
thought
And
fanned
the
dreams
it
never
brought.
'Whether
is
better,
the
gift
or
the
donor?
Come
to
me,'
Quoth
the
pine-tree,
'I
am
the
giver
of
honor.
My
garden
is
the
cloven
rock,
And
my
manure
the
snow;
And
drifting
sand-heaps
feed
my
stock,
In
summer's
scorching
glow.
He
is
great
who
can
live
by
me:
The
rough
and
bearded
forester
Is
better
than
the
lord;
God
fills
the
scrip
and
canister,
Sin
piles
the
loaded
board.
The
lord
is
the
peasant
that
was,
The
peasant
the
lord
that
shall
be;
The
lord
is
hay,
the
peasant
grass,
One
dry,
and
one
the
living
tree.
Who
liveth
by
the
ragged
pine
Foundeth
a
heroic
line;
Who
liveth
in
the
palace
hall
Waneth
fast
and
spendeth
all.
He
goes
to
my
savage
haunts,
With
his
chariot
and
his
care;
My
twilight
realm
he
disenchants,
And
finds
his
prison
there.
'What
prizes
the
town
and
the
tower?
Only
what
the
pine-tree
yields;
Sinew
that
subdued
the
fields;
The
wild-eyed
boy,
who
in
the
woods
Chants
his
hymn
to
hills
and
floods,
Whom
the
city's
poisoning
spleen
Made
not
pale,
or
fat,
or
lean;
Whom
the
rain
and
the
wind
purgeth,
Whom
the
dawn
and
the
day-star
urgeth,
In
whose
cheek
the
rose-leaf
blusheth,
In
whose
feet
the
lion
rusheth,
Iron
arms,
and
iron
mould,
That
know
not
fear,
fatigue,
or
cold.
I
give
my
rafters
to
his
boat,
My
billets
to
his
boiler's
throat,
And
I
will
swim
the
ancient
sea
To
float
my
child
to
victory,
And
grant
to
dwellers
with
the
pine
Dominion
o'er
the
palm
and
vine.
Who
leaves
the
pine-tree,
leaves
his
friend,
Unnerves
his
strength,
invites
his
end.
Cut
a
bough
from
my
parent
stem,
And
dip
it
in
thy
porcelain
vase;
A
little
while
each
russet
gem
Will
swell
and
rise
with
wonted
grace;
But
when
it
seeks
enlarged
supplies,
The
orphan
of
the
forest
dies.
Whoso
walks
in
solitude
And
inhabiteth
the
wood,
Choosing
light,
wave,
rock
and
bird,
Before
the
money-loving
herd,
Into
that
forester
shall
pass,
From
these
companions,
power
and
grace.
Clean
shall
he
be,
without,
within,
From
the
old
adhering
sin,
All
ill
dissolving
in
the
light
Of
his
triumphant
piercing
sight:
Not
vain,
sour,
nor
frivolous;
Not
mad,
athirst,
nor
garrulous;
Grave,
chaste,
contented,
though
retired,
And
of
all
other
men
desired.
On
him
the
light
of
star
and
moon
Shall
fall
with
purer
radiance
down;
All
constellations
of
the
sky
Shed
their
virtue
through
his
eye.
Him
Nature
giveth
for
defence
His
formidable
innocence;
The
mounting
sap,
the
shells,
the
sea,
All
spheres,
all
stones,
his
helpers
be;
He
shall
meet
the
speeding
year,
Without
wailing,
without
fear;
He
shall
be
happy
in
his
love,
Like
to
like
shall
joyful
prove;
He
shall
be
happy
whilst
he
wooes,
Muse-born,
a
daughter
of
the
Muse.
But
if
with
gold
she
bind
her
hair,
And
deck
her
breast
with
diamond,
Take
off
thine
eyes,
thy
heart
forbear,
Though
thou
lie
alone
on
the
ground.
'
Heed
the
old
oracles,
Ponder
my
spells;
Song
wakes
in
my
pinnacles
When
the
wind
swells.
Soundeth
the
prophetic
wind,
The
shadows
shake
on
the
rock
behind,
And
the
countless
leaves
of
the
pine
are
strings
Tuned
to
the
lay
the
wood-god
sings.
Hearken!
Hearken!
If
thou
wouldst
know
the
mystic
song
Chanted
when
the
sphere
was
young.
Aloft,
abroad,
the
pæan
swells;
O
wise
man!
hear'st
thou
half
it
tells?
O
wise
man!
hear'st
thou
the
least
part?
'T
is
the
chronicle
of
art.
To
the
open
ear
it
sings
Sweet
the
genesis
of
things,
Of
tendency
through
endless
ages,
Of
star-dust,
and
star-pilgrimages,
Of
rounded
worlds,
of
space
and
time,
Of
the
old
flood's
subsiding
slime,
Of
chemic
matter,
force
and
form,
Of
poles
and
powers,
cold,
wet,
and
warm:
The
rushing
metamorphosis
Dissolving
all
that
fixture
is,
Melts
things
that
be
to
things
that
seem,
And
solid
nature
to
a
dream.
O,
listen
to
the
undersong,
The
ever
old,
the
ever
young;
And,
far
within
those
cadent
pauses,
The
chorus
of
the
ancient
Causes!
Delights
the
dreadful
Destiny
To
fling
his
voice
into
the
tree,
And
shock
thy
weak
ear
with
a
note
Breathed
from
the
everlasting
throat.
In
music
he
repeats
the
pang
Whence
the
fair
flock
of
Nature
sprang.
O
mortal!
thy
ears
are
stones;
These
echoes
are
laden
with
tones
Which
only
the
pure
can
hear;
Thou
canst
not
catch
what
they
recite
Of
Fate
and
Will,
of
Want
and
Right,
Of
man
to
come,
of
human
life,
Of
Death
and
Fortune,
Growth
and
Strife.'
Once
again
the
pine-tree
sung:—
'
Speak
not
thy
speech
my
boughs
among:
Put
off
thy
years,
wash
in
the
breeze;
My
hours
are
peaceful
centuries.
Talk
no
more
with
feeble
tongue;
No
more
the
fool
of
space
and
time,
Come
weave
with
mine
a
nobler
rhyme.
Only
thy
Americans
Can
read
thy
line,
can
meet
thy
glance,
But
the
runes
that
I
rehearse
Understands
the
universe;
The
least
breath
my
boughs
which
tossed
Brings
again
the
Pentecost;
To
every
soul
resounding
clear
In
a
voice
of
solemn
cheer,—
"Am
I
not
thine?
Are
not
these
thine?"
And
they
reply,
"Forever
mine!"
My
branches
speak
Italian,
English,
German,
Basque,
Castilian,
Mountain
speech
to
Highlanders,
Ocean
tongues
to
islanders,
To
Fin
and
Lap
and
swart
Malay,
To
each
his
bosom-secret
say.
'Come
learn
with
me
the
fatal
song
Which
knits
the
world
in
music
strong,
Come
lift
thine
eyes
to
lofty
rhymes,
Of
things
with
things,
of
times
with
times,
Primal
chimes
of
sun
and
shade,
Of
sound
and
echo,
man
and
maid,
The
land
reflected
in
the
flood,
Body
with
shadow
still
pursued.
For
Nature
beats
in
perfect
tune,
And
rounds
with
rhyme
her
every
rune,
Whether
she
work
in
land
or
sea,
Or
hide
underground
her
alchemy.
Thou
canst
not
wave
thy
staff
in
air,
Or
dip
thy
paddle
in
the
lake,
But
it
carves
the
bow
of
beauty
there,
And
the
ripples
in
rhymes
the
oar
forsake.
The
wood
is
wiser
far
than
thou;
The
wood
and
wave
each
other
know
Not
unrelated,
unaffied,
But
to
each
thought
and
thing
allied,
Is
perfect
Nature's
every
part,
Rooted
in
the
mighty
Heart.
But
thou,
poor
child!
unbound,
unrhymed,
Whence
camest
thou,
misplaced,
mistimed,
Whence,
O
thou
orphan
and
defrauded?
Is
thy
land
peeled,
thy
realm
marauded?
Who
thee
divorced,
deceived
and
left?
Thee
of
thy
faith
who
hath
bereft,
And
torn
the
ensigns
from
thy
brow,
And
sunk
the
immortal
eye
so
low?
Thy
cheek
too
white,
thy
form
too
slender,
Thy
gait
too
slow,
thy
habits
tender
For
royal
man;—they
thee
confess
An
exile
from
the
wilderness,—
The
hills
where
health
with
health
agrees,
And
the
wise
soul
expels
disease.
Hark!
in
thy
ear
I
will
tell
the
sign
By
which
thy
hurt
thou
may'st
divine.
'When
thou
shalt
climb
the
mountain
cliff,
Or
see
the
wide
shore
from
thy
skiff,
To
thee
the
horizon
shall
express
But
emptiness
on
emptiness;
There
lives
no
man
of
Nature's
worth
In
the
circle
of
the
earth;
And
to
thine
eye
the
vast
skies
fall,
Dire
and
satirical,
On
clucking
hens
and
prating
fools,
On
thieves,
on
drudges
and
on
dolls.
And
thou
shalt
say
to
the
Most
High,
"Godhead!
all
this
astronomy,
And
fate
and
practice
and
invention,
Strong
art
and
beautiful
pretension,
This
radiant
pomp
of
sun
and
star,
Throes
that
were,
and
worlds
that
are,
Behold!
were
in
vain
and
in
vain;—
It
cannot
be,—I
will
look
again.
Surely
now
will
the
curtain
rise,
And
earth's
fit
tenant
me
surprise;—
But
the
curtain
doth
not
rise,
And
Nature
has
miscarried
wholly
Into
failure,
into
folly."
'Alas!
thine
is
the
bankruptcy,
Blessed
Nature
so
to
see.
Come,
lay
thee
in
my
soothing
shade,
And
heal
the
hurts
which
sin
has
made.
I
see
thee
in
the
crowd
alone;
I
will
be
thy
companion.
Quit
thy
friends
as
the
dead
in
doom,
And
build
to
them
a
final
tomb;
Let
the
starred
shade
that
nightly
falls
Still
celebrate
their
funerals,
And
the
bell
of
beetle
and
of
bee
Knell
their
melodious
memory.
Behind
thee
leave
thy
merchandise,
Thy
churches
and
thy
charities;
And
leave
thy
peacock
wit
behind;
Enough
for
thee
the
primal
mind
That
flows
in
streams,
that
breathes
in
wind:
Leave
all
thy
pedant
lore
apart;
God
hid
the
whole
world
in
thy
heart.
Love
shuns
the
sage,
the
child
it
crowns,
Gives
all
to
them
who
all
renounce.
The
rain
comes
when
the
wind
calls;
The
river
knows
the
way
to
the
sea;
Without
a
pilot
it
runs
and
falls,
Blessing
all
lands
with
its
charity;
The
sea
tosses
and
foams
to
find
Its
way
up
to
the
cloud
and
wind;
The
shadow
sits
close
to
the
flying
ball;
The
date
fails
not
on
the
palm-tree
tall;
And
thou,—go
burn
thy
wormy
pages,—
Shalt
outsee
seers,
and
outwit
sages.
Oft
didst
thou
thread
the
woods
in
vain
To
find
what
bird
had
piped
the
strain:—
Seek
not,
and
the
little
eremite
Flies
gayly
forth
and
sings
in
sight.
'Hearken
once
more!
I
will
tell
thee
the
mundane
lore.
Older
am
I
than
thy
numbers
wot,
Change
I
may,
but
I
pass
not.
Hitherto
all
things
fast
abide,
And
anchored
in
the
tempest
ride.
Trenchant
time
behoves
to
hurry
All
to
yean
and
all
to
bury:
All
the
forms
are
fugitive,
But
the
substances
survive.
Ever
fresh
the
broad
creation,
A
divine
improvisation,
From
the
heart
of
God
proceeds,
A
single
will,
a
million
deeds.
Once
slept
the
world
an
egg
of
stone,
And
pulse,
and
sound,
and
light
was
none;
And
God
said,
"Throb!"
and
there
was
motion
And
the
vast
mass
became
vast
ocean.
Onward
and
on,
the
eternal
Pan,
Who
layeth
the
world's
incessant
plan,
Halteth
never
in
one
shape,
But
forever
doth
escape,
Like
wave
or
flame,
into
new
forms
Of
gem,
and
air,
of
plants,
and
worms.
I,
that
to-day
am
a
pine,
Yesterday
was
a
bundle
of
grass.
He
is
free
and
libertine,
Pouring
of
his
power
the
wine
To
every
age,
to
every
race;.
Unto
every
race
and
age
He
emptieth
the
beverage;
Unto
each,
and
unto
all,
Maker
and
original.
The
world
is
the
ring
of
his
spells,
And
the
play
of
his
miracles.
As
he
giveth
to
all
to
drink,
Thus
or
thus
they
are
and
think.
With
one
drop
sheds
form
and
feature;
With
the
next
a
special
nature;
The
third
adds
heat's
indulgent
spark;
The
fourth
gives
light
which
eats
the
dark;
Into
the
fifth
himself
he
flings,
And
conscious
Law
is
King
of
kings.
As
the
bee
through
the
garden
ranges,
From
world
to
world
the
godhead
changes;
As
the
sheep
go
feeding
in
the
waste,
From
form
to
form
He
maketh
haste;
This
vault
which
glows
immense
with
light
Is
the
inn
where
he
lodges
for
a
night.
What
reeks
such
Traveller
if
the
bowers
Which
bloom
and
fade
like
meadow
flowers
A
bunch
of
fragrant
lilies
be,
Or
the
stars
of
eternity?
Alike
to
him
the
better,
the
worse,—
The
glowing
angel,
the
outcast
corse.
Thou
metest
him
by
centuries,
And
lo!
he
passes
like
the
breeze;
Thou
seek'st
in
globe
and
galaxy,
He
hides
in
pure
transparency;
Thou
askest
in
fountains
and
in
fires,
He
is
the
essence
that
inquires.
He
is
the
axis
of
the
star;
He
is
the
sparkle
of
the
spar;
He
is
the
heart
of
every
creature;
He
is
the
meaning
of
each
feature;
And
his
mind
is
the
sky.
Than
all
it
holds
more
deep,
more
high.'