And he woke soon, but we woke soon
And drew the nursery blind,
All wondering at the waning moon
With the small June roses twined:
Low in her cradle swung the moon
With an elfin dawn behind.
In whispers, while our elders slept,
We knelt and said our prayers,
And dress’d us and on tiptoe crept
Adown the creaking stairs.
The world’s possessors lay abed,
And all the world was ours—
“Nay, nay, but hark! the Mower’s tread!
And we must save the flowers!”
The Mower knew not rest nor haste—
That old unweary man:
But we were young. We paused and raced
And gather’d while we ran.
O youth is careless, youth is fleet,
With heart and wing of bird!
The lark flew up beneath our feet,
To his copse the pheasant whirr’d;
The cattle from their darkling lairs
Heaved up and stretch’d themselves;
Almost they trod at unawares
Upon the busy elves
That dropp’d their spools of gossamer,
To dangle and to dry,
And scurried home to the hollow fir
Where the white owl winks an eye.
Nor you, nor I, nor Burd so blithe
Had driven them in this haste;
But the old, old man, so lean and lithe,
That afar behind us paced;
So lean and lithe, with shoulder’d scythe,
And a whetstone at his waist.
Within the gate, in a grassy round
Whence they had earliest flown,
He upside-down’d his scythe, and ground
Its edge with careful hone.
But we heeded not, if we heard, the sound,
For the world was ours alone;
The world was ours!—and with a bound
The conquering Sun upshone!
And while as from his level ray
We stood our eyes to screen.
The world was not as yesterday
Our homelier world had been—
So grey and golden-green it lay
All in his quiet sheen,
That wove the gold into the grey,
The grey into the green.
Sure never hand of Puck, nor wand
Of Mab the fairies’ queen,
Nor prince nor peer of fairyland
Had power to weave that wide riband
Of the grey, the gold, the green.
But the Gods of Greece had been before
And walked our meads along,
The great authentic Gods of yore
That haunt the earth from shore to shore
Trailing their robes of song.
And where a sandall’d foot had brush’d,
And where a scarfed hem,
The flowers awoke from sleep and rush’d
Like children after them.
Pell-mell they poured by vale and stream,
By lawn and steepy brae—
“O children, children! while you dream,
Your flowers run all away!”
But afar and abed and sleepily
The children heard us call;
And Burd so blithe and you and I
Must be gatherers for all.
The meadow-sweet beside the hedge,
The dog-rose and the vetch,
The sworded iris ’mid the sedge,
The mallow by the ditch—