C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Henry Augustin Beers (18471926)
His Footsteps
T
Upon whose guess I go:
Eye hath not seen, ear hath not heard;
And yet I know, I know,
The door of air swing wide
To one lost chamber of the wood
Where those shy mysteries hide,—
From which the wood-thrush sings,
Still luring me to darker shades,
In—in—to colder springs.
But hark the pine-tops’ war,
That sleep, and in their dreams repeat
The music of the shore.
What song is that they sing?
Those airs that search the forest’s heart,
What rumor do they bring?
And in the stillness, clear
The river’s tell-tale warning rings:
“’Tis near—’tis near—’tis near!”
The ghostly music plays,
When, toward the enchanted bower, the prince
Draws closer through the maze.
A wilder than ye know,
To lairs beyond the utmost haunt
Of thrush or vireo.
The ferns still lightly shake.
Ever I follow hard upon,
But never overtake.