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Poems (Linn)/Early Morning in a Vineyard

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Poems
by Edith Willis Linn
Early Morning in a Vineyard
4649438Poems — Early Morning in a VineyardEdith Willis Linn
EARLY MORNING IN A VINEYARD.
THE clustered, purple, luscious fruitShall not a tribute song awake;Come chant the praise of verdant vineWhere dainty tendrils curl and twine,A song for very greenness' sake.
Ere on the vineyard's trellised rowsThe early morning dews have dried,The merry birds begin to sing;The butterfly puts forth his wing;The bee the wild-rose bloom has tried.
The tiny weeds their dainty headsToward the spotless blue uplift,And myriad swarming, flitting thingsSpread in the sun their gauzy wings,Or on the soft breeze float and drift.
Though peace is there like that we feelIn dim, cool, holy aisles of prayer,No thing is still. The vine's soft swayMakes moving shadows on the way;Motion and action everywhere.
Let those whose souls are knit with painIn this fresh morning beauty stand;Better than scroll and book and creedThe lesson of the lowliest weed,The sense that God is close at hand.
Whatever joy of clustered fruitThe autumn's richest gift may be,The vineyard on a summer mornHolds grace that puts it all to scorn,—The summer's very soul set free.