Page:Shingle-short-Baughan-1908.djvu/164

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

THE PADDOCK

Song of the Creek.


Where the youngest grass
Of the mountain-pass
By the melting snow is lipp’d,
Little by little, drop by drop,
Over the rocks I dripp’d.
Only the mountain-mosses saw,
And the mountain-daisies sipp’d.


Then, shyly, secretly,
Stealing out of sight,
I crept where the folded
Forest holds the night;
And there, amid the darkness
Inviolably hid,
Onward, downward,
I trickled, and I slid:
Moistening the fallen leaves,
Soaking thro’ the moss,
This boulder underneath,
That one across:
Scattering, spattering,
Twisting on again,
Gathering in the dewy Dusk,
Growing in the Rain:
Down, down, and still down,
On I hurried, on!
Glad to be coming—
Gladder to be gone!

156