Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
Menotomy Lake (Spy Pond)
By John Townsend Trowbridge (18271916)T
And few things so fair as the gleam of glad water;
Spring leaps from the brow of old Winter to-day,
Full-formed, like the fabled Olympian’s daughter.
Dispelling the gloom of the sullen northeasters;
The air is all balm, and the lake is as bright
As some bird in brave plumage that ripples and glisters.
And Beauty, that slumbered, awakes and remembers;
Love bursts into being, joy breaks into song,
In a glory of blossoms life flames from its embers.
Under banks deep-embroidered with grass and young clover;
Far round, in and out, wind the beautiful shores,—
The lake in the midst, with the blue heavens over.
The patriarch clouds in curled raiment, that lazily
Lift their bare foreheads in dazzling white light,
In that deep under-sky glimmer softly and hazily.
Peer the steeples and half-hidden roofs of the village.
Here lie the broad slopes in their loveliest green;
There, crested with orchards or checkered with tillage.
The warehouse of ice, a vast windowless castle;
The ash and the sycamore, shadeless and bare;
The elm-boughs in blossom, the willows in tassel.
Far along, overleaning, the sunshiny willows
Advance like a surge from the grove’s deeper glooms,—
The first breaking swell of the summer’s green billows.
The arrowhead tarries, the lily still lingers;
But the cat-tails are piercing the wave with their spears,
And the fern is unfolding its infantile fingers.
I know every cove, every moist indentation,
Where mosses and violets ever invite
To some still unexperienced, fresh exploration.
Slides off with a splash as my paddle approaches;
Beside the green island I silence the frog,
In warm, sunny shallows I startle the roaches.
From the lake grow the trees, bending over its bosom;
Or lie in my boat on some flower-starred bank,
And drink in delight from each bird-song and blossom.
The finches are here,—singing throats by the dozen;
The catbird, complaining, or mocking the rest;
The wing-spotted blackbird, sweet bobolink’s cousin.
The small silken tufts on the boughs of the beeches,
Each leaf-cluster parting its delicate sheath,
As it gropingly, yearningly opens and reaches;
The bees have forsaken the maples’ red flowers
And gone to the willows, whose luminous clouds
Drop incense and gold in impalpable showers.
With fragrance and murmur the senses delighting;
The lake-side, gold-laced with the pollen they shed
At the touch of a breeze or a small bird alighting;
From the hair of the birches,—O group of slim graces,
That see in the water your silver limbs gleam,
And lean undismayed over infinite spaces!—
On upland and terrace the fruit-gardens blooming;
The wavering, winged, happy creatures that pass,—
White butterflies flitting, and bumblebees booming;
Light, color, and all the delirious lyrical
Bursts of bird-voices; life filled with new wine,—
Every motion and change in this beautiful miracle,
All the springs of my youth, with their sweetness and splendor:
O years, that so softly take wing and depart!
O perfume! O memories pensive and tender!