Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.
My Lady of the BeechesMadison Cawein
H
Winds and wild perfume,
That the twilight pleaches
Into gleam and gloom,
Build for her a room.
Misty as the morn,
When the wild bee hummeth,
At its honey-horn,
In the wayside thorn.
With the drowsy night,
Like a moonbeam glimmer
Here she walks in white,
With a firefly-light.
Like a moth she goes;
Here a moment sitting
By this wilding rose,
With my heart’s repose.
Has assumed the grace
Of her form: and Fancies,
Flashed from eye and face,
Brood about the place.
In its plunge and poise,
To itself has taken
Quiet of her voice,
And restrains its joys.
What and whence she is;
She, who doth enspell me,
Fill my soul with bliss
Of her spirit kiss.
And the soul implore,
Who is it may reach her—
Safe behind the door
Of all woodland lore?