Mnemosyne

Mnemosyne

Original Text
The Poems of Trumbull Stickney, ed. George Cabot Lodge, William Vaughn Moody, and John Ellerton Lodge (Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin, 1905): 29-30. PS 3537 T525 1905 Robarts Library.
1It 's autumn in the country I remember.
2How warm a wind blew here about the ways!
3And shadows on the hillside lay to slumber
4During the long sun-sweetened summer-days.
5It's cold abroad the country I remember.
6The swallows veering skimmed the golden grain
7At midday with a wing aslant and limber;
8And yellow cattle browsed upon the plain.
9It 's empty down the country I remember.
10I had a sister lovely in my sight:
11Her hair was dark, her eyes were very sombre;
12We sang together in the woods at night.
13It 's lonely in the country I remember.
14The babble of our children fills my ears,
15And on our hearth I stare the perished ember
16To flames that show all starry thro' my tears.
17It 's dark about the country I remember.
18There are the mountains where I lived. The path
19Is slushed with cattle-tracks and fallen timber,
20The stumps are twisted by the tempests' wrath.
21But that I knew these places are my own,
23The earth, and I to people it alone.
24It rains across the country I remember.

Notes

22] cumber: trouble, burden. Back to Line
Publication Start Year
1902
Publication Notes
Dramatic Verses (1902), p. 25
RPO poem Editors
Ian Lancashire
RPO Edition
RPO 1998.