Title:   Poems By a Little Girl

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Author:   Hilda Conkling

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Poems By a Little Girl

Hilda Conkling



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Table of Contents

Poems By a Little Girl........................................................................................................................................1

Hilda Conkling .........................................................................................................................................1

FOR YOU, MOTHER.............................................................................................................................3

PREFACE ................................................................................................................................................3

FOUR TO FIVE YEARS OLD............................................................................................................................8

FIRST SONGS........................................................................................................................................8

FIVE TO SIX YEARS OLD .................................................................................................................................9

GARDEN OF THE WORLD................................................................................................................10

THEATRESONG................................................................................................................................10

VELVETS ..............................................................................................................................................10

TWO SONGS........................................................................................................................................11

MOON SONG.......................................................................................................................................12

SUNSET................................................................................................................................................12

MOUSE.................................................................................................................................................12

SHORT STORY....................................................................................................................................13

BY LAKE CHAMPLAIN ......................................................................................................................13

SPRING SONG.....................................................................................................................................13

WATER.................................................................................................................................................14

SHADY BRONN ...................................................................................................................................14

CHICKADEE........................................................................................................................................15

THE CHAMPLAIN SANDMAN ..........................................................................................................15

ROSEMOSS........................................................................................................................................15

ABOUT MY DREAMS .........................................................................................................................16

SIX TO SEVEN YEARS OLD ...........................................................................................................................17

AUTUMN SONG..................................................................................................................................17

THE DREAM........................................................................................................................................17

BUTTERFLY........................................................................................................................................18

EVENING ..............................................................................................................................................18

THUNDER SHOWER ...........................................................................................................................18

RED CROSS SONG ..............................................................................................................................19

PURPLE ASTERS .................................................................................................................................19

SONG FOR A PLAY............................................................................................................................19

PEACOCK FEATHERS ........................................................................................................................20

RED ROOSTER....................................................................................................................................20

TREETOAD........................................................................................................................................20

SEVEN TO NINE YEARS OLD.......................................................................................................................21

THE LONESOME WAVE ....................................................................................................................21

REDCAP MOSS ..................................................................................................................................22

RAMBLER ROSE .................................................................................................................................22

GIFT .......................................................................................................................................................22

THE WHITE CLOUD...........................................................................................................................23

MOON THOUGHT ...............................................................................................................................23

THE OLD BRIDGE ...............................................................................................................................23

FERNS...................................................................................................................................................24

LAND OF NOD .....................................................................................................................................24

SUN FLOWERS ....................................................................................................................................24

HOLLAND SONG................................................................................................................................25

FOUNTAINTALK..............................................................................................................................25


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Table of Contents

POPLARS ..............................................................................................................................................26

THE TOWER AND THE FALCON.....................................................................................................26

THOUGHTS ..........................................................................................................................................26

POEMSKETCH IN THREE PARTS..................................................................................................27

THE DEWLIGHT...............................................................................................................................28

YELLOW SUMMERTHROAT ..........................................................................................................28

PEGASUS ..............................................................................................................................................29

VENICE BRIDGE .................................................................................................................................29

NIGHT GOES RUSHING BY..............................................................................................................30

DANDELION ........................................................................................................................................30

IF I COULD TELL YOU THE WAY...................................................................................................30

ROSEPETAL .......................................................................................................................................31

POEMS..................................................................................................................................................31

SEAGARDE..........................................................................................................................................31

EASTER................................................................................................................................................32

BLUEBIRD...........................................................................................................................................32

GEOGRAPHY .......................................................................................................................................32

MARCH THOUGHT .............................................................................................................................33

MORNING............................................................................................................................................33

SONG .....................................................................................................................................................33

SNOWFLAKE SONG ...........................................................................................................................34

SNOWSTORM ......................................................................................................................................34

POPPY...................................................................................................................................................34

BUTTERFLY........................................................................................................................................35

CLOUDS...............................................................................................................................................35

NARCISSUS.........................................................................................................................................35

LITTLE SNAIL.....................................................................................................................................36

CHERRIES ARE RIPE.........................................................................................................................36

A THING FORGOTTEN......................................................................................................................36

LITTLE PAPOOSE:..............................................................................................................................37

FAIRIES AGAIN ...................................................................................................................................37

OH, MY HAZELEYED MOTHER....................................................................................................37

THE GREEN PALM TREE..................................................................................................................38

TREASURE ...........................................................................................................................................38

TWO PICTURES..................................................................................................................................39

TELL ME ...............................................................................................................................................39

SILVERHORN......................................................................................................................................39

SPARKLING DROP OF WATER........................................................................................................40

HAYCOCK.........................................................................................................................................40

ONLY MORNINGGLORY THAT FLOWERED ..............................................................................41

WEATHER ............................................................................................................................................41

SUMMERDAY SONG.......................................................................................................................41

PINK ROSEPETALS..........................................................................................................................42

THE LONESOME GREEN APPLE.....................................................................................................42

I AM .......................................................................................................................................................42

MUSHROOM SONG............................................................................................................................43

THE APPLEJELLYFISHTREE.....................................................................................................43

THREE LOVES .....................................................................................................................................44


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Table of Contents

THE FIELD OF WONDER ...................................................................................................................44

MOON DOVES .....................................................................................................................................45

I WENT TO SEA ...................................................................................................................................45

THREE THOUGHTS OF MY HEART................................................................................................46

SNOWCAPPED MOUNTAIN...........................................................................................................46

THE BROOK AND ITS CHILDREN ...................................................................................................47

BIRD OF PARADISE...........................................................................................................................47

SHINY BROOK....................................................................................................................................48

HILLS....................................................................................................................................................48

ADVENTURE.......................................................................................................................................48

FAIRIES................................................................................................................................................49

HUMMINGBIRD ................................................................................................................................49

BLUE GRASS.......................................................................................................................................50

ENVOY ..................................................................................................................................................50


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Poems By a Little Girl

Hilda Conkling

FOR YOU, MOTHER 

PREFACE 

FOUR TO FIVE YEARS OLD  

FIRST SONGS  

FIVE TO SIX YEARS OLD  

GARDEN OF THE WORLD 

THEATRESONG 

VELVETS 

TWO SONGS 

MOON SONG 

SUNSET 

MOUSE 

SHORT STORY 

BY LAKE CHAMPLAIN 

SPRING SONG 

WATER 

SHADY BRONN 

CHICKADEE 

THE CHAMPLAIN SANDMAN 

ROSEMOSS 

ABOUT MY DREAMS  

SIX TO SEVEN YEARS OLD  

AUTUMN SONG 

THE DREAM 

BUTTERFLY 

EVENING 

THUNDER SHOWER 

RED CROSS SONG 

PURPLE ASTERS 

SONG FOR A PLAY 

PEACOCK FEATHERS 

RED ROOSTER 

TREETOAD  

SEVEN TO NINE YEARS OLD  

THE LONESOME WAVE 

REDCAP MOSS 

RAMBLER ROSE 

GIFT 

THE WHITE CLOUD 

MOON THOUGHT 

THE OLD BRIDGE 

FERNS 

LAND OF NOD  

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SUN FLOWERS 

HOLLAND SONG 

FOUNTAINTALK 

POPLARS 

THE TOWER AND THE FALCON 

THOUGHTS 

POEMSKETCH IN THREE PARTS 

THE DEWLIGHT 

YELLOW SUMMERTHROAT 

PEGASUS 

VENICE BRIDGE 

NIGHT GOES RUSHING BY 

DANDELION 

IF I COULD TELL YOU THE WAY 

ROSEPETAL 

POEMS 

SEAGARDE 

EASTER 

BLUEBIRD 

GEOGRAPHY 

MARCH THOUGHT 

MORNING 

SONG 

SNOWFLAKE SONG 

SNOWSTORM 

POPPY 

BUTTERFLY 

CLOUDS 

NARCISSUS 

LITTLE SNAIL 

CHERRIES ARE RIPE 

A THING FORGOTTEN 

LITTLE PAPOOSE: 

FAIRIES AGAIN 

OH, MY HAZELEYED MOTHER 

THE GREEN PALM TREE 

TREASURE 

TWO PICTURES 

TELL ME 

SILVERHORN 

SPARKLING DROP OF WATER 

HAYCOCK 

ONLY MORNINGGLORY THAT FLOWERED 

WEATHER 

SUMMERDAY SONG 

PINK ROSEPETALS 

THE LONESOME GREEN APPLE 

I AM 

MUSHROOM SONG 

THE APPLEJELLYFISHTREE 

THREE LOVES  


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THE FIELD OF WONDER 

MOON DOVES 

I WENT TO SEA 

THREE THOUGHTS OF MY HEART 

SNOWCAPPED MOUNTAIN 

THE BROOK AND ITS CHILDREN 

BIRD OF PARADISE 

SHINY BROOK 

HILLS 

ADVENTURE 

FAIRIES 

HUMMINGBIRD 

BLUE GRASS 

ENVOY  

FOR YOU, MOTHER

I have a dream for you, Mother, Like a soft thick fringe to hide your eyes. I have a surprise for you, Mother,

Shaped like a strange butterfly. I have found a way of thinking To make you happy; I have made a song and a

poem All twisted into one. If I sing, you listen; If I think, you know. I have a secret from everybody in the

world full of people But I cannot always remember how it goes; It is a song For you, Mother, With a curl of

cloud and a feather of blue And a mist Blowing along the sky. If I sing it some day, under my voice, Will it

make you happy? Thanks are due to the editors of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, The Delineator, Good

Housekeeping, The Lyric, St. Nicholas, and Contemporary Verse for their courteous permission to reprint

many of the following poems.

PREFACE

A book which needs to be written is one dealing with the childhood of authors. It would be not only

interesting, but instructive; not merely profitable in a general way, but practical in a particular. We might

hope, in reading it, to gain some sort of knowledge as to what environments and conditions are most

conducive to the growth of the creative faculty. We might even learn how not to strangle this rare faculty in

its early years.

At this moment I am faced with a difficult task, for here is an author and her childhood in a most unusual

position; these two conditionsthat of being an author, and that of being a childappear simultaneously,

instead of in the due order to which we are accustomed. For I wish at the outset to state, and emphatically,

that it is poetry, the stuff and essence of poetry, which this book contains. I know of no other instance in

which such really beautiful poetry has been written by a child; but, confronted with so unwonted a state of

things, two questions obtrude themselves: how far has the condition of childhood been impaired by, not only

the possession, but the expression, of the gift of writing; how far has the condition of authorship (at least in

its more mature state still to come) been hampered by this early leap into the light?

The first question concerns the little girl and can best be answered by herself some twenty years hence; the

second concerns the world, and again the answer must wait. We can, however, do somethingwe can see

what she is and what she has done. And if the one is interesting to the psychologist, the other is no less

important to the poet.


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Hilda Conkling is the younger daughter of Mrs. Grace Hazard Conkling, Assistant Professor of English at

Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts. At the time of writing, Hilda has just passed her ninth birthday.

Her sister, Elsa, is two years her senior. The children and their mother live all the year round in Northampton,

and glimpses of the woods and hills surrounding the little town crop up again and again in these poems. This

is Emily Dickinson's country, and there is a reminiscent sameness in the fauna and flora of her poems in

these.

The two little girls go to a school a few blocks from where they live. In the afternoons, they take long walks

with their mother, or play in the garden while she writes. On rainy days, there are books and Mrs. Conkling's

piano, which is not just a piano, for Mrs. Conkling is a musician, and we may imagine that the children hear a

special music as they certainly read a special literature. By "special" I do not mean a prescribed course (for

dietitians of the mind are quite as apt to be faddists as dietitians of the stomach), but just that sort of reading

which a person who passionately loves books would most want to introduce her children to. And here I think

we have the answer to the why of Hilda. She and her sister have been their mother's close companions ever

since they were born. They have never known that somewhat equivocal relationshipa child with its nurse.

They have never been for hours at a time in contact with an elementary intelligence. If Hilda had shown these

poems to even the most sympathetic nurse, what would have been the result? In the first place, they would, in

all probability, have been lost, since Hilda does not write her poems, but tells them; in the second, they would

have been either extravagantly praised or laughingly commented upon. In either case, the fine flower of

creation would most certainly have been injured.

Then again, blessed though many of the nurses of childhood undoubtedly are (and we all remember them),

they have no means of answering the thousand and one questions of an eager, opening mind. To be an

adequate companion to childhood, one must know so many things. Hilda is fortunate in her mother, for if

these poems reveal one thing more than another it is that Mrs. Conkling is dowered with an admirable tact. In

the dedication poem to her mother, the little girl says:

"If I sing, you listen;

If I think, you know."

No finer tribute could be offered by one person to another than the contented certainty of understanding in

those two lines.

Hilda tells her poems, and the method of it is this: They come out in the course of conversation, and Mrs.

Conkling is so often engaged in writing that there is nothing to be remarked if she scribbles absently while

talking to the little girls. But this scribbling is really a complete draught of the poem. Occasionally Mrs.

Conkling writes down the poem later from memory and reads it afterwards to the child, who always

remembers if it is not exactly in its original form. No line, no cadence, is altered from Hilda's version; the

titles have been added for convenience, but they are merely obvious handles derived from the text.

Naturally it is only a small proportion of Hilda's life which is given to poetry. Much is devoted to running

about, a part to study, etc. It is, however, significant that Hilda is not very keen about games with other

children. Not that she is by any means either shy or solitary, but they do not greatly interest her. Doubtless

childhood pays its debt of possession more steadily than we know.

Now to turn to the book itself; at the very start, here is an amazing thing. This slim volume contains one

hundred and seven separate poems, and that is counting as one all the very short pieces written between the

ages of five and six. Certainly that is a remarkable output for a little girl, and the only possible explanation is

that the poems are perfectly instinctive. There is no working over as with an adult poet. Hilda is

subconscious, not selfconscious. Her mother says that she rarely hesitates for a word. When the feeling is

strong, it speaks for itself. Read the dedication poem, "For You, Mother." It is full of feeling, and of that


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simple, dignified, adequate diction which is the speech of feeling:

"I have found a way of thinking

To make you happy."

That is beautiful, and, once read, inevitable; but it waited for a child to say. Poem after poem is charged with

this feeling, this expression of great love:

     "I will sing you a song,

     Sweetsofmyheart,

     With love in it,

     (How I love you!)"

"Will you love me tomorrow after next As if I had a bird's way of singing?"

But it is not only the pulse of feeling in such passages which makes them surprising; it is the perfectly

original expression of it. When one reads a thing and voluntarily exclaims: "How beautiful! How natural!

How true!" then one knows that one has stumbled upon that flash of personality which we call genius. These

poems are full of such flashes:

"Sparkle up, little tired flower

Leaning in the grass!"

. . .

"There is a star that runs very fast,

That goes pulling the moon

Through the tops of the poplars."

.   .    .

"There is sweetness in the tree,

And fireflies are counting the leaves.

I like this country,

I like the way it has."

A pansy has a "thinking face"; a rooster has a comb "gay as a parade," he shouts "crooked words, loud . . .

sharp . . . not beautiful!"; frozen water is asked if it cannot "lift" itself "with sun," and "Easter morning says a

glad thing over and over."

No matter who wrote them, those passages would be beautiful, the oldest poet in the world could not improve

upon them; and yet the reader has only to turn to the text to see the incredibly early age at which such

expressions came into the author's mind.

Where childhood betrays genius is in the mounting up of detail. Inadequate lines not infrequently jar a total

effect, as when, in the poem of the star pulling the moon, she suddenly ends, "Mr. Moon, does he make you

hurry?" Or, speaking of a drop of water:

"So it went on with its life

For several years

Until at last it was never heard of

Any more."

This is the perennial child, thinking as children think; and we are glad of it. It makes the whole more healthy,

more sure of development. When the subconscious mind of Hilda Conkling takes a vacation, she does not


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"nod," as erstwhile Homer; she merely reverts to type and is a child again.

I think too highly of these poems to speak of the volume as though it were the finished achievement of a

grownup person. Some of the poems can be taken in that way, but by no means all. The child who writes

them frequently transcends herself, but her thoughts for the most part are those proper to every imaginative

child. Fairies play a large role in her fancies, and so does the sandman. There are kings, and princesses, and

golden wings, and there are reminiscences of storybooks, and hints of pictures that have pleased her. After

all, that is the way we all make our poems, but the grownup poet tries to get away from his author, he tries

to see more than the painter has seen. The little girl is quite untroubled by any questions of technique. She

takes what to her is the obvious always, and in these copied pieces it is, naturally, less her own peculiar

obvious than in the nature poems.

Hilda Conkling is evidently possessed of a rare and accurate power of observation. And when we add this to

her gift of imagination, we see that it is the perfectly natural play of these two faculties which makes what to

her is an obvious expression. She does not search for it, it is her natural mode of thought. But, luckily for her,

she has been guided by a wisdom which has not attempted to show her a better way. Her observation has

been carefully, but unobtrusively, cultivated; her imagination has been stimulated by the reading of excellent

books; but both these lines of instruction have been kept apparently apart from her own work. She has been

let alone there; she has been taught by an analogy which she has never suspected. By this means, her poetical

gift has functioned happily, without ever for a moment experiencing the tension of doubt.

A few passages will serve to show how well Hilda knows how to use her eyes:

"The water came in with a wavy look

Like a spider's web."

A bluebird has a back "like a feathered sky." Apostrophizing a snowcapped mountain she writes:

"You shine like a lily

But with a different whiteness."

She asks a hummingbird:

"Why do you stand on the air

And no sun shining?"

She hears a chickadee:

"Far off I hear him talking

The way smooth bright pebbles

Drop into water."

Now let us follow her a step farther, to where the imagination takes a firmer hold:

"The world turns softly

Not to spill its lakes and rivers.

The water is held in its arms

And the sky is held in the water."

School lessons, and a reflection in a pond that is the stuff of which all poetry is made. It is the fusion

which shows the quality of the poet. Turn to the text and read "Geography." Really, this is an extraordinary

child!


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It is pleasant to watch her with the artist's eagerness intrigued by the sounds of words, for instance:

"silvery lonesome lapping of the long wave."

Again, enchanted by a little bell of rhyme, we have this amusing catalogue:

"Johnflowers,

Maryflowers,

Pollyflowers

Cauliflowers."

That is the conscious Hilda, the gay little girl, but it shows a quick ear nevertheless. We can almost hear the

giggle with which that "Cauli flowers" came out. Usually rhyme does not appear to be a matter of moment

to her. Some poets think in rhyme, some do not; Hilda evidently belongs to the second category. "Treasure,"

and "The AppleJellyFishTree," and "Short Story" are the only poems in the book which seem to follow a

clearly rhymed pattern. If any misguided schoolmistress had ever suggested that a poem should have rhyme

and metre, this book would never have been "told." In "Moon Doves," however, there is a distinctly metrical

effect without rhyme. But the great majority of the poems are built upon cadence, and the subtlety of this

little girl's cadences are a delight to those who can hear them. Doubtless her musical inheritance has all to do

with this, for in poem after poem the instinct for rhythm is unerring. So constantly is this the case, that it is

scarcely necessary to point out particular examples. I may, however, name, as two of her best for other

qualities as well, "Gift," and "Poems." The latter contains two of her quick strokes of observation and

comparison: the morning "like the inside of a snowapple," and she herself curled "cushionshaped" in the

windowseat.

Dear me! How simple these poems seem when you read them done. But try to write something new about a

dandelion. Try it; and then read the poem of that name here. It is charming; how did she think of it? How

indeed!

Delightful conceits she hasanother is "Sun Flowers"but how comes a child of eight to prick and point

with the rapier of irony? For it is nothing less than irony in "The Tower and the Falcon." Did she quite grasp

its meaning herself? We may doubt it. In this poem, the subconscious is very much on the job.

To my thinking, the most successful poems in the bookand now I mean successful from a grownup

standpointare "For You, Mother," "Red Rooster," "Gift," "Poems," "Dandelion," "Butterfly," "Weather,"

"Hills," and "Geography." And it will be noticed that these are precisely the poems which must have sprung

from actual experience. They are not the book poems, not even the fairy poems, they are the records of

reactions from actual happenings. I have not a doubt that Hilda prefers her fairy stories. They are the

conscious play of her imagination, it must be "fun" to make them. Ah, but it is the unconscious with which

we are most concerned, those very poems which are probably to her the least interesting are the ones which

most certainly reveal the fulness of poetry from which she draws. She probably hardly thought at all, so

natural was it, to say that three pinks "smell like more of them in a blue vase," but the expression fills the air

with so strong a scent that no superlative could increase it.

"Gift" is a lovely poem, it has feeling, expression, originality, cadence. If a child can write such a poem at

eight years old, what does it mean? That depends, I think, on how long the instructors of youth can be

persuaded to keep "hands off." A period of imitation is, I fear, inevitable, but if consciousness is not induced

by direct criticism, if instruction in the art of writing is abjured, the imitative period will probably be got

through without undue loss. I think there is too much native sense of beauty and proportion here to be entirely

killed even by the drying and freezing process which goes by the name of education.


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What this book chiefly shows is high promise; but it also has its pages of real achievement, and that of so

high an order it may well set us pondering.

                                   AMY LOWELL.

FOUR TO FIVE YEARS OLD

FIRST SONGS

Rosy plumtree, think of me 

When Spring comes down the world! 

II 

There's dozens full of dandelions 

Down in the field: 

Little gold plates, 

Little gold dishes in the grass. 

I cannot count them, 

But the fairies know every one. 

III 

Oh wrinkling star, wrinkling up so wise, 

When you go to sleep do you shut your eyes? 

IV 

The red moon comes out in the night. 

When I'm asleep, the moon comes pattering up 

Into the trees. 

Then I peep out my window 

To watch the moon go by. 

Sparkle up, little tired flower 

Leaning in the grass! 

Did you find the rain of night 

Too heavy to hold? 

VI 

The garden is full of flowers 

All dancing round and round. 

          Johnflowers, 

          Maryflowers, 

          Pollyflowers, 

          Cauliflowers, 

They dance round and round 

And they bow down and down 

To a blackeyed daisy. 


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VII 

There is going to be the sound of bells 

And murmuring. 

This is the brook dance: 

There is going to be sound of voices, 

And the smallest will be the brook: 

It is the song of water 

You will hear, 

A little winding song 

To dance to . . . 

VIII 

Blossoms in the growing tree, 

Why don't you speak to me? 

I want to grow like you, 

Smiling . . . smiling . . . 

IX 

If I find a moon, 

I will sing a moonsong. 

If I find a flower, 

What song shall I sing, 

Rosesong or cloversong? 

The blossoms will be gone in the winter: 

Oh apples, come for the June! 

Can you come, will you bloom? 

Will you stay till the cold? 

XI 

I will sing you a song, 

Sweetsofmyheart, 

With love in it, 

(How I love you!) 

And a rose to swing in the wind, 

The wind that swings roses! 

XII 

Will you love me tomorrow after next, 

As if I had a bird's way of singing? 

FIVE TO SIX YEARS OLD


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GARDEN OF THE WORLD

The butterfly swings over the violet 

That stands by the water, 

In the garden that sings 

All day. 

The sun goes up in the dawn, 

The water waves softly. 

In the trees are little breezes, 

In the garden trees. 

Blue hills and blue waters I 

The big blue ocean lies around in the sun 

Watching his waves toss . . . 

THEATRESONG

Eagles were flying over the sky 

And mermaids danced in the gold waters. 

Eagles were calling over the sky 

And the water was the color of blue flowers. 

Sunshine was 'flected in the waves 

Like meadows of white buds. 

This is what I saw 

On a morning long ago . . . 

VELVETS

By a Bed of Pansies 

This pansy has a thinking face 

Like the yellow moon. 

This one has a face with white blots: 

I call him the clown. 

Here goes one down the grass 

With a pretty look of plumpness; 

She is a little girl going to school 

With her hands in the pockets of her pinafore. 

Her name is Sue. 

I like this one, in a bonnet, 

Waiting, 

Her eyes are so deep! 


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But these on the other side, 

These that wear purple and blue, 

They are the Velvets, 

The king with his cloak, 

The queen with her gown, 

The prince with his feather. 

These are dark and quiet 

And stay alone. 

I know you, Velvets, 

Color of Dark, 

Like the pinetree on the hill 

When stars shine! 

TWO SONGS

After Hearing the Wagner Storybook 

The birds came to tell Siegfried a story, 

A story of the woods out of a tree: 

How the ring was fairy 

And there were things it could do for him 

Day and night: 

How the river flowed green and wavy 

Under the Rainbow Bridge, 

And Brunnhilda slept in a wreath of fire. 

Grane watched her, standing close beside, 

Grane the big white horse, 

Dear Grane of her heart. 

She dreamed she was far from her father, 

But Siegfried was coming, 

Siegfried, through the big trees, 

Up the hill, 

Through the fire! 

II 

"Siegfried, hear us! 

Give us back the ring!" 

The lady with the shell, 

The waterlady with the green hair, 

Calling, cried "Siegfried!" 

But he laughed to hear her, 

Laughed in the sun 

And went into the woods laughing: 

He was happy in his heart, 

And he had golden hair 

Till the sun loved him. 


Poems By a Little Girl

TWO SONGS 11



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Page No 16


"Siegfried!" 

I will call him! 

"Siegfried!" 

But he will not hear me. 

He could talk to birds and rivers, 

And he is gone. 

MOON SONG

There is a star that runs very fast, 

That goes pulling the moon 

Through the tops of the poplars. 

It is all in silver, 

The tall star: 

The moon rolls goldenly along 

Out of breath. 

Mr. Moon, does he make you hurry? 

SUNSET

Once upon a time at eveninglight 

A little girl was sad. 

There was a color in the sky, 

A color she knew in her dreamful heart 

And wanted to keep. 

She held out her arms 

Long, long, 

And saw it flow away on the wind. 

When it was gone 

She did not love the moonlight 

Or care for the stars. 

She had seen the rose in the sky. 

Sometimes I am sad 

Because I have a thought 

Of this little girl. 

MOUSE

Little mouse in gray velvet, 

Have you had a cheesebreakfast? 


Poems By a Little Girl

MOON SONG 12



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Page No 17


There are no crumbs on your coat, 

Did you use a napkin? 

I wonder what you had to eat, 

And who dresses you in gray velvet? 

SHORT STORY

I found the gold on the hill; 

I found the hid gold! 

The wicked queen 

Stole the gold, 

Hid it under a stone 

And never told. 

The selfish queen 

Rolling away 

In her white limousine, 

Never knew nor dreamed 

That I searched all day 

Till I found the gold, 

The gold! 

BY LAKE CHAMPLAIN

I was bare as a leaf 

And I felt the wind on my shoulder. 

The trees laughed 

When I picked up the sun in my fingers. 

The wind was chasing the waves, 

Tangling their white curls. 

"Willow trees," I said, 

"O willows, 

Look at your lake! 

Stop laughing at a little girl 

Who runs past your feet in the sand!" 

SPRING SONG

I love daffodils. 

I love Narcissus when he bends his head. 


Poems By a Little Girl

SHORT STORY 13



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Page No 18


I can hardly keep March and spring and Sunday and daffodils 

Out of my rhyme of song. 

Do you know anything about the spring 

When it comes again? 

God knows about it while winter is lasting. 

Flowers bring him power in the spring, 

And birds bring it, and children. 

He is sometimes sad and alone 

Up there in the sky trying to keep his worlds happy. 

I bring him songs 

When he is in his sadness, and weary. 

I tell him how I used to wander out 

To study stars and the moon he made, 

And flowers in the dark of the wood. 

I keep reminding him about his flowers he has forgotten, 

And that snowdrops are up. 

What can I say to make him listen? 

"God," I say, 

"Don't you care! 

Nobody must be sad or sorry 

In the springtime of flowers." 

WATER

The world turns softly 

Not to spill its lakes and rivers. 

The water is held in its arms 

And the sky is held in the water. 

What is water, 

That pours silver, 

And can hold the sky? 

SHADY BRONN

When the clouds come deep against the sky 

I sit alone in my room to think, 

To remember the fairy dreams I made, 

Listening to the rustling out of the trees. 

The stories in my fairytale book 

Come new to me every day. 

But at my farm on the hilltop 

I have the wind for a fairy, 

And the shapes of things: 

Shady Bronn is the name of my little farm: 


Poems By a Little Girl

WATER 14



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Page No 19


It is the name of a dream I have 

Where leaves move, 

And the wind rings them like little bells. 

CHICKADEE

The chickadee in the appletree 

Talks all the time very gently. 

He makes me sleepy. 

I rock away to the sealights. 

Far off I hear him talking 

The way smooth bright pebbles 

Drop into water . . . 

Chickadeedeedee . . . 

THE CHAMPLAIN SANDMAN

The Sandman comes pattering across the Bay: 

His hair is silver, 

His footstep soft. 

The moon shines on his silver hair, 

On his quick feet. 

The Sandman comes searching across the Bay: 

He goes to all the houses he knows 

To put sand in little girls' eyes. 

That is why I go to my sleepy bed, 

And why the lakegull leaves the moon alone. 

There are no wings to moonlight any more, 

Only the Sandman's hair. 

ROSEMOSS

Little Rosemoss beside the stone, 

Are you lonely in the garden? 

There are no friends of you, 

And the birds are gone. 

Shall I pick you?" 

"Little girl up by the hollyhock, 

I am not lonely. 

I feel the sun burning, 


Poems By a Little Girl

CHICKADEE 15



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Page No 20


I hold light in my cup, 

I have all the rain I want, 

I think things to myself that you don't know, 

And I listen to the talk of crickets. 

I am not lonely, 

But you may pick me 

And take me to your mother." 

ABOUT MY DREAMS

Now the flowers are all folded 

And the dark is going by. 

The evening is arising . . . 

It is time to rest. 

When I am sleeping 

I find my pillow full of dreams. 

They are all new dreams: 

No one told them to me 

Before I came through the cloud. 

They remember the sky, my little dreams, 

They have wings, they are quick, they are sweet. 

Help me tell my dreams 

To the other children, 

So that their bread may taste whiter, 

So that the milk they drink 

May make them think of meadows 

In the sky of stars. 

Help me give bread to the other children 

So that their dreams may come back: 

So they will remember what they knew 

Before they came through the cloud. 

Let me hold their little hands in the dark, 

The lonely children, 

ABOUT MY DREAMS 

The babies that have no mothers any more. 

Dear God, let me hold up my silver cup 

For them to drink, 

And tell them the sweetness 

Of my dreams. 


Poems By a Little Girl

ABOUT MY DREAMS 16



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Page No 21


SIX TO SEVEN YEARS OLD

AUTUMN SONG

I made a ring of leaves 

On the autumn grass: 

I was a fairy queen all day. 

Inside the ring, the wind wore sandals 

Not to make a noise of going. 

The caterpillars, like little snow men, 

Had wound themselves in their winter coats. 

The hands of the trees were bare 

And their fingers fluttered. 

I was a queen of yellow leaves and brown, 

And the redness of my fairy ring 

Kept me warm. 

For the wind blew near, 

Though he made no noise of going, 

And I hadn't a closemade wrap 

Like the caterpillars. 

Even a queen of fairies can be cold 

When summer has forgotten and gone! 

Keep me warm, red leaves; 

Don't let the frost tiptoe into my ring 

On the magic grass! 

THE DREAM

When I slept, I thought I was upon the mountaintops, 

And this is my dream. 

I saw the little people come out into the night, 

I saw their wings glittering under the stars. 

Crickets played all the tunes they knew. 

It was so comfortable with light . . . 

Stars, a rainbow, the moon! 

The fairies had shiny crowns 

On their bright hair. 

The bottoms of their little gowns were roses! 

It was musical in the moony light, 

And the fairy queen, 

Oh, it was all golden where she came 

With tiny pages on her trail. 


Poems By a Little Girl

SIX TO SEVEN YEARS OLD 17



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Page No 22


She walked slowly to her high throne, 

Slowly, slowly to music, 

And watched the dancing that went on 

All night long in starglitter 

On the mountaintops. 

BUTTERFLY

Butterfly, 

I like the way you wear your wings. 

Show me their colors, 

For the light is going. 

Spread out their edges of gold, 

Before the Sandman puts me to sleep 

And evening murmurs by. 

EVENING

Now it is dusky, 

And the hermit thrush and the black and white warbler 

Are singing and answering together. 

There is sweetness in the tree, 

And fireflies are counting the leaves. 

I like this country, 

I like the way it has, 

But I cannot forget my dream I had of the sea, 

The gulls swinging and calling, 

And the foamy towers of the waves. 

THUNDER SHOWER

The dark cloud raged. 

Gone was the morning light. 

The big drops darted down: 

The storm stood tall on the rosetrees: 

And the bees that were getting honey 

Out of wet roses, 

The hiding bees would not come out of the flowers 

Into the rain. 


Poems By a Little Girl

BUTTERFLY 18



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Page No 23


RED CROSS SONG

When I heard the bees humming in the hive, 

They were so busy about their honey, 

I said to my mother, 

What can I give, 

What can I give to help the Red Cross? 

And Mother said to me: 

You can give honey too! 

Honey of smiles! 

Honey of love! 

PURPLE ASTERS

It isn't alone the asters 

In my garden, 

It is the butterflies gleaming 

Like crowns of kings and queens! 

It isn't alone purple 

And blue on the edge of purple, 

It is what the sun does, 

And the air moving clearly, 

The petals moving and the wings, 

In my queer little garden! 

SONG FOR A PLAY

Soldier drop that golden spear! 

Wait till the fires arise! 

Wait till the sky drops down and touches the spear, 

Crystal and motherofpearl! 

The sunlight droops forward 

Like wings. 

The birds sing songs of sundrops. 

The sky leans down where the spear stands upward. . . 

I hear music . . . 

It is the end . . . 


Poems By a Little Girl

RED CROSS SONG 19



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Page No 24


PEACOCK FEATHERS

On trees of fairyland 

Grow peacock feathers of daylight colors 

Like an Austrian fan. 

But there is a strange thing! 

I have heard that night gathers these feathers 

For her cloak; 

I have heard that the stars, the moon, 

Are the eyes of peacock feathers 

From fairy trees. 

It is a thing that may be, 

But I should not be sure of it, my dear, 

If I were you! 

RED ROOSTER

Red rooster in your gray coop, 

O stately creature with tailfeathers red and blue, 

Yellow and black, 

You have a comb gay as a parade 

On your head: 

You have pearl trinkets 

On your feet: 

The short feathers smooth along your back 

Are the dark color of wet rocks, 

Or the rippled green of ships 

When I look at their sides through water. 

I don't know how you happened to be made 

So proud, so foolish, 

Wearing your coat of many colors, 

Shouting all day long your crooked words, 

Loud . . . sharp . . . not beautiful! 

TREETOAD

Treetoad is a small gray person 

With a silver voice. 

Treetoad is a leafgray shadow 

That sings. 

Treetoad is never seen 

Unless a star squeezes through the leaves, 


Poems By a Little Girl

PEACOCK FEATHERS 20



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Page No 25


Or a moth looks sharply at a gray branch. 

How would it be, I wonder, 

To sing patiently all night, 

Never thinking that people are asleep? 

Raindrops and mist, starriness over the trees, 

The moon, the dew, the other little singers, 

Cricket . . . toad . . . leaf rustling . . . 

They would listen: 

It would be music like weather 

That gets into all the corners 

Of outofdoors. 

Every night I see little shadows 

I never saw before. 

Every night I hear little voices 

I never heard before. 

When night comes trailing her starry cloak, 

I start out for slumberland, 

With treetoads calling along the roadside. 

Goodnight, I say to one, Goodby, I say to another: 

I hope to find you on the way 

We have traveled before! 

I hope to hear you singing on the Road of Dreams! 

SEVEN TO NINE YEARS OLD

THE LONESOME WAVE

There is an island 

In the middle of my heart, 

And all day comes lapping on the shore 

A long silver wave. 

It is the lonesome wave; 

I cannot see the other side of it. 

It will never go away 

Until it meets the glad gold wave 

Of happiness! 

Wandering over the monstrous rocks, 

Looking into the caves, 

I see my island dark, all cold, 

Until the gold wave sweeps in 

From a sea deep blue, 


Poems By a Little Girl

SEVEN TO NINE YEARS OLD 21



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Page No 26


And flings itself on the beach. 

Oh, it is joy, then! 

No more whispers like sorrow, 

No more silvery lonesome lapping of the long wave . . . 

REDCAP MOSS

Have you seen redcap moss 

In the woods? 

Have you looked under the trembling caps 

For faces? 

Have you seen wonder on those faces 

Because you are so big? 

RAMBLER ROSE

Rambler Rose in great clusters, 

Looking at me, at my mother with me 

Under this appletree, 

Your faces watch us from outside the shade. 

          The wind blows on you, 

          The rain drops on you, 

          The sun shines on you, 

You are brighter than before. 

You turn your faces to the wind 

And watch my mother and me, 

Thinking of things I cannot mention 

Outside of my mind. 

Rambler Rose in the shining wind, 

You smile at me, 

Smile at my mother! 

GIFT

This is mint and here are three pinks 

I have brought you, Mother. 

They are wet with rain 

And shining with it. 

The pinks smell like more of them 

In a blue vase: 

The mint smells like summer 


Poems By a Little Girl

REDCAP MOSS 22



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Page No 27


In many gardens. 

THE WHITE CLOUD

There are many clouds 

But not like the one I see, 

For mine floats like a swan in featheriness 

Over the River of the Broken Pine. 

There are many clouds 

But not like the one that goes sailing 

Like a ship full of gold that shines, 

Like a ship leaning above blue water. 

There are many clouds 

But not like the one I wait for, 

For mine will have a strangeness 

Whiter than anything your eyes remember. 

MOON THOUGHT

The moon is thinking of the river 

Winding through the mountains far away, 

Because she has a river in her heart 

Full of the same silver. 

THE OLD BRIDGE

The old bridge has a wrinkled face. 

He bends his back 

For us to go over. 

He moans and weeps 

But we do not hear. 

Sorrow stands in his face 

For the heavy weight and worry 

Of people passing. 

The trees drop their leaves into the water; 

The sky nods to him. 

The leaves float down like small ships 

On the blue surface 

Which is the sky. 


Poems By a Little Girl

THE WHITE CLOUD 23



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Page No 28


He is not always sad: 

He smiles to see the ships go down 

And the little children 

Playing on the river banks. 

FERNS

Small ferns upcoming through the mossy green, 

Upcurling and springing, 

See trees circling round them, 

And the straight brook like a lilystem: 

Hear the water laughing 

At the stern old pinetree 

Who keeps sighing to himself all day long 

What's the use! What's the use! 

LAND OF NOD

I wander mountain to mountain, 

From sea to sea, 

I wander into a country 

Where everyone is asleep. 

There in the Land of Nod 

I never think of home, 

For home is there, 

With sleeping doves and silvery girls, 

Sleeping boys and drowsy roses. 

There I find people whose eyes are heavy, 

And trees with folded wings. 

SUN FLOWERS

Sunflowers, stop growing! 

If you touch the sky where those clouds are passing 

Like tufts of dandelion gone to seed, 

The sky will put you out! 

You know it is blue like the sea . . . 

Maybe it is wet, too! 

Your gold faces will be gone forever 

If you brush against that blue 

Ever so softly! 


Poems By a Little Girl

FERNS 24



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Page No 29


HOLLAND SONG

For a Dutch picture 

When light comes creeping through the 

That shine with mist, 

When winds blow soft, 

Windmills wake and whirl. 

In Holland, in Holland, 

Everything is cheerful 

Across the sea: 

White nets are beside the water 

Where ships sail by. 

The mountains begin to get blue, 

The Dutch girls begin to sing, 

The windmills begin to whirl. 

Then night comes 

The mountains turn dark gray 

And faint away into night. 

Not a bird chirps his song. 

All is drowsy, 

All is strange, 

With the moon and stars shining round the world: 

The wind stops, 

The windmills stop 

In Holland . . . 

FOUNTAINTALK

Said the fountain to its clear bed, 

"You might flow faster! 

I am sprinkling my best, every day, 

But ice is holding you fast. 

Can't you get out? 

Can't you lift yourself with sun? 

I am tired waiting for slow cold water 

To fling about the air: 

Can't you wake yourself up?" 

But the fountainbasin murmured softly 

"Sleep . . . sleep . . . 

Sleep . . . sleep . . . 

You with your talking and talking! 

Hush . . . hush . . . 


Poems By a Little Girl

HOLLAND SONG 25



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Page No 30


I hear the birdsandman!" 

POPLARS

The poplars bow forward and back; 

They are like a fan waving very softly. 

They tremble, 

For they love the wind in their feathery branches. 

They love to look down at the shallows, 

          At the mermaids 

          On the sandy shore; 

They love to look into morning's face 

          Cool in the water. 

THE TOWER AND THE FALCON

There was a tower, once, 

In a London street. 

It was the highest, widest, thickest tower, 

The proudest, roundest, finest tower 

Of all towers. 

English men passed it by: 

They could not see it all 

Because it went above treetops and clouds. 

It was lonely up there where the trees stopped 

Until one day 

A blue falcon came flying. 

He cried: 

"Tower! Do you know you are the highest, finest, roundest, 

The tallest, proudest, greatest, 

Of all the towers 

In all the world?" 

He went away. 

That night the tower made a new song 

About himself. 

THOUGHTS

My thoughts keep going far away 


Poems By a Little Girl

POPLARS 26



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Page No 31


Into another country under a different sky: 

My thoughts are seafoam and sand; 

They are applepetals fluttering. 

POEMSKETCH IN THREE PARTS

(Made for the picture on the jacket of the 

Norwegian book, The Great Hunger, by Johan Bojer) 

THE ROLLING IN OF THE WAVE 

It was night when the sky was dark blue 

And the water came in with a wavy look 

Like a spider's web. 

The point of the slope came down to the water's edge; 

It was green with a fairy ring of forgetmenot and fern. 

The white foam licked the side of the slope 

As it came up and bent backward; 

It curled up like a beautiful cindertree 

Bending in the wind. 

II 

THE COMING OF THE GREAT BIRD 

A boy was watching the water 

As it came lapping the edge of fern. 

Little ships passed him 

As the moon came leaning across dark blue rays of light. 

The spruce trees saw the white ships sailing away, 

And the moon bending up the blue sky 

Where stars were twinkling like fairy lamps; 

The boy was looking toward foreign lands 

As the ships passed, 

Their white sails glittering in the moonlight. 

He was thinking how he wished to see 

Foreign lands, strange people, 

When suddenly a bird came flying! 

It swooped down upon the slope 

And spoke to him: 

"Do you want to go across the deep blue sea? 

Get on my back; I will take you." 

"Oh," cried the little boy, "who sent you? 

Who knew my thoughts of foreign lands?"


Poems By a Little Girl

POEMSKETCH IN THREE PARTS 27



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Page No 32


III 

THE ISLAND 

They flew as the nightwind flowed, very softly, 

They heard sweet singing that the water sang, 

They came to a place where the sea was shallow 

And saw treasure hidden there. 

There was one poplar tree 

On the lonely island, 

Swaying for sadness. 

The clouds went over their heads 

Like a fleet of drifting ships. 

And there they sank down out of the air 

Into the dream. 

THE DEWLIGHT

The Dewman comes over the mountains wide, 

Over the deserts of sand, 

With his bag of clear drops 

And his brush of feathers. 

He scatters brightness. 

The white bunnies beg him for dew. 

He sprinkles their fur, 

They shake themselves. 

All the time he is singing 

          The unknown world is beautiful! 

He polishes flowers, 

Humming "Oh, beautiful!" 

He sings in the soft light 

That grows out of the dew, 

Out of the misty dewlight that leans over him 

He makes his song . . . 

          It is beautiful, the unknown world! 

YELLOW SUMMERTHROAT

Yellow summerthroat sat singing 

In a bending spray of willow tree. 

Thin fine greeny lines on his throat, 

The ruffled outside of his throat, 

Trembled when he sang. 


Poems By a Little Girl

THE DEWLIGHT 28



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Page No 33


He kept saying the same thing; 

The willow did not mind. 

          I knew what he said, I knew, 

          But how can I tell you? 

I have to watch the willow bend in the wind. 

PEGASUS

Come dear Pegasus, I said, 

Let me ride on your back; 

I have often seen your shadow in the glittering creek; 

Pegasus, beautiful Pegasus, 

Let me sit on your back! 

He was away, 

But I was on his back, 

So I went with him. 

We had a castle in a mountain cloud. 

So quickly was he away, 

I had no time to look or speak! 

That was the last I saw of father or mother. 

We went far from the shining creek, 

Farther than I know how to tell you: 

It was goodby. 

VENICE BRIDGE

For a painting 

Away back in an old city 

I saw a bridge. 

That bridge belonged to Venice. 

It was to the rainbow clear 

It traveled, 

Over an old canal. 

You had to pass a cloudy gate 

To reach the color . . . 

Bridges do sometimes begin on the earth 

And end in the sky. 


Poems By a Little Girl

PEGASUS 29



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Page No 34


NIGHT GOES RUSHING BY

Night goes hurrying over 

Like sweeping clouds; 

The birds are nested; their song is silent. 

The wind says oooooothrough the trees 

For their lullaby. 

The moon shines down on the sleeping birds. 

My cottage roof is like a sheet of silk 

Spun like a cobweb. 

My appletrees are bare as the oaks in the forest; 

When the moon shines 

I see no leaves. 

I am alone and very quiet 

Hoping the moon may say something 

Before long. 

DANDELION

O little soldier with the golden helmet, 

What are you guarding on my lawn? 

You with your green gun 

And your yellow beard, 

Why do you stand so stiff? 

There is only the grass to fight! 

IF I COULD TELL YOU THE WAY

Down through the forest to the river 

I wander. 

There are swans flying, 

Swans on the water, 

Duck, wild birds. 

Fairies live here; 

They know no sorrow. 

Birds, winds, 

They are the only people. 

If I could tell you the way to this place, 

You would sell your house and your land 

For silver or a little gold, 


Poems By a Little Girl

NIGHT GOES RUSHING BY 30



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Page No 35


You would sail up the river, 

Tie your boat to the Black Stone, 

Build a leafhut, make a twigfire, 

Gather mushrooms, drink springwater, 

Live alone and sing to yourself 

For a year and a year and a year! 

ROSEPETAL

Petal with rosy cheeks, 

Petal with thoughts of your own, 

Petal of my crimsonwhite flower out of June, 

Little petal of my heart! 

POEMS

See the fur coats go by! 

The morning is like the inside of a snowapple. 

I will curl myself cushionshape 

On the windowseat; 

I will read poems by snowlight. 

If I cannot understand them so, 

I will turn them upside down 

And read them by the red candles 

Of garden brambles. 

SEAGARDE

I will return to you 

O stillest and dearest, 

To see the pearl of light 

That flashes in your golden hair; 

To hear you sing your songs of starlight 

And tell your stories of the wonderful land 

Of stars and fleecy sky; 

To say to you that Seagarde will soon be here, 

Seagarde the fairy 

With her seagulls of hope! 


Poems By a Little Girl

ROSEPETAL 31



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Page No 36


EASTER

On Easter morn 

Up the faint cloudy sky 

I hear the Easter bell, 

Ding dong . . . ding dong . . . 

Easter morning scatters lilies 

On every doorstep; 

Easter morning says a glad thing 

Over and over. 

Poor people, beggars, old women 

Are hearing the Easter bell . . . 

Ding dong . . . ding dong . . . 

BLUEBIRD

Oh bluebird with light red breast, 

And your blue back like a feathered sky, 

You have to go down south 

Before biting winter comes 

And my flowerbeds are covered with fluff out of the clouds. 

Before you go, 

Sing me one more song 

Of treetops down south, 

Of darkies singing their babies to sleep, 

Of sand and glittering stones 

Where rivers pass; 

Then . . . goodby! 

GEOGRAPHY

I can tell balsam trees 

By their grayish bluish silverish look of smoke. 

Pine trees fringe out. 

Hemlocks look like Christmas. 

The spruce tree is feathered and rough 

Like the legs of the red chickens in our poultry yard. 

I can study my geography from chickens 

Named for Plymouth Rock and Rhode Island, 

And from trees out of Canada. 

No; I shall leave the chickens out. 

I shall make a new geography of my own.


Poems By a Little Girl

EASTER 32



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Page No 37


I shall have a hillside of spruce and hemlock 

Like a separate country, 

And I shall mark a walk of spires on my map, 

A secret road of balsam trees 

With blue buds. 

Trees Fat smell like a wind out of fairyland 

Where little people live 

Who need no geography 

But trees. 

MARCH THOUGHT

I am waiting for the flowers 

To come back: 

I am alone, 

But I can wait for the birds. 

MORNING

There is a brook I must hear 

Before I go to sleep. 

There is a birch tree I must visit 

Every night of clearness. 

I have to do some dreaming, 

I have to listen a great deal, 

Before light comes back 

By a silver arrow of cloud, 

And I rub my eyes and say 

It must be morning on this hill! 

SONG

A scarlet bird went sailing away through the wood . . . 

It was only a mist of dream 

That floated by. 

Bare boughs of my appletree, 

Beautiful gray arms stretched out to me, 

Swaying to and fro like angels' wings . . . 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 38


It was only a mist of dream 

That floated by. 

SNOWFLAKE SONG

Snowflakes come in fleets 

Like ships over the sea. 

The moon shines down on the crusty snow: 

The stars make the sky sparkle like goldfish 

In a glassy bowl. 

Bluebirds are gone now, 

But they left their song behind them. 

The moon seems to say: 

It is time for summer when the birds come back 

To pick up their lonesome songs. 

SNOWSTORM

Snowflakes are dancing. 

They run down out of heaven. 

Coming home from somewhere down the long tired road 

They flake us sometimes 

The way they do the grass, 

And the stretch of the world. 

The grassblades are crowned with snowflakes. 

They make me think of daisies 

With white frills around their necks 

With golden faces and green gowns; 

Poor little daisies, 

Tiptoe and shivering 

In the cold! 

POPPY

Oh big red poppy, 

You look stern and sturdy, 

Yet you bow to the wind 

And sing a lullaby . . . 

          "Sleep, little ones under my breast 

          In the moonshine . . ." 

You make this lullaby, 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 39


Sweet, short, 

Slow, beautiful, 

And you thank the dew for giving you a drink. 

BUTTERFLY

As I walked through my garden 

I saw a butterfly light on a flower. 

His wings were pink and purple: 

He spoke a small word . . . 

It was Follow! 

"I cannot follow" 

I told him, 

"I have to go the opposite way." 

CLOUDS

The clouds were gray all day. 

At last they departed 

And the blue diamonds shone again. 

I watched clouds float past and flow back 

Like waves across the sea, 

Waves that are foamy and soft, 

When they hear clouds calling 

Mother Sea, send us up your song 

Of hushaby! 

NARCISSUS

Narcissus, I like to watch you grow 

When snow is shining 

Beyond the crystal glass. 

A coat of snow covers the hills far. 

The sun is setting; 

And you stretch out flowers of palest white 

In the pink of the sun. 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 40


LITTLE SNAIL

I saw a little snail 

Come down the garden walk. 

He wagged his head this way . . . that way . . . 

Like a clown in a circus. 

He looked from side to side 

As though he were from a different country. 

I have always said he carries his house on his back . . . 

Today in the rain 

I saw that it was his umbrella! 

CHERRIES ARE RIPE

The cherry tree is red now; 

Cherry tree nods his red head 

And calls to the sun: 

Let down the birds out of the sky; 

Send home the birds to build nests in my arms, 

For I am ready to feed them. 

There is a little girl coming for cherries too . . . 

(I am that little girl, I who am singing . . .) 

She is coming with hair flying! 

The butterflies will be going (says the cherry) 

For it is getting dusk. 

When it is dawn, 

They will be up and out with the dew, 

And sparkle as the dew does 

On the tips of tall slender green grasses 

Around my feet, 

Or on the cheeks of fruit I have ripened, 

Red cherries for birds 

And children. 

A THING FORGOTTEN

White owl is not gloomy; 

Black bat is not sad. 

It is only that each has forgotten 

Something he used to remember: 

Black bat goes searching . . . searching . . . 

White owl says over and over 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 41


Who? What? Where? 

LITTLE PAPOOSE:

Little papoose 

swung high in the branches 

Hears a song of birds, stars, clouds, 

Small nests of birds, 

Small buds of flowers. 

But he is thinking of his mother with dark hair 

Like her horse's mane. 

Fair clouds nod to him 

Where he swings in the tree, 

But he is thinking of his father 

Dark and glistening and wonderful, 

Of his father with a voice like ice and velvet, 

And tones of falling water, 

Of his father who shouts 

Like a storm. 

FAIRIES AGAIN

Fairies dancing in the woods at night 

Make me think of foreign places, 

Of places unknown. 

Fairies with sparkling crowns and dewy hands, 

Sprinkle flowers and mosses to keep them fresh, 

Talk to the birds to keep them cheery. 

Once a bird came home 

And found a fairy asleep in his nest, 

Upon his baby eggs, 

To keep them warm! 

OH, MY HAZELEYED MOTHER

Oh, my hazeleyed mother, 

I looked behind the mulberry bush 

And saw you standing there. 

You were all in white 

With a star on your forehead. 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 42


Oh, my hazeleyed mother, 

I do not remember what you said to me, 

But the light floating above you 

Was your love for your little girl. 

THE GREEN PALM TREE

I sat under a delicate palm tree 

On a shore of sounding waves. 

I felt sure I was alone, 

Listening. 

          A seagull flew by from France, 

          A seagull flew by from Spain, 

          A seagull flew by from Mexico! 

I laughed softly 

When they saw me: 

It was those travelers 

From foreign countries 

Changed my thoughts 

To laughter! 

TREASURE

Robbers carry a treasure 

Into a field of wheat. 

With a great bag of silk 

They go on careful feet. 

They dig a hole, deep, deep, 

They bury it under a stone, 

Cover it up with turf, 

Leave it alone. 

What is there in the bag? 

Stones that shine, gold? 

_I_ cannot rob the robbers! 

THEY have not told. 

Tonight I'd like to know 

If they will go 

Softly to find the treasure? 

I'd like to know 

How much yellow gold 

A bag like that can hold? 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 43


TWO PICTURES

Gorgeous Blue Mountain 

I see a great mountain 

Stand among clouds; 

You would never know 

Where it ended. . . . 

Oh, gorgeous blue mountain of my heart 

And of my love for you! 

II 

SeaGull 

From a yellow strip of sand 

I watch a gull go by. 

He is brighteyed 

To see the world of waves. 

All his dream is of the sea. 

All his love is for his mate. 

TELL ME

Tell me quiet things 

When it is shadowy: 

It is at morningbreak you must tell me tales 

Like those about Odysseus, 

Morning is the time for ships 

And strangers! 

SILVERHORN

It is out in the mountains 

I find him, 

My snowy deer 

With silver horns like dew, 

Horns that sparkle. 

I think I see him in the hollow, 

He is on the high hill! 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 44


I think I see him on the hill, 

He is leaping through the air! 

I think I can ride upon his back, 

He is like moonlight I cannot hold, 

He is like thoughts I lose. 

He flows by 

All white . . . 

He makes me think of the brook 

Out of the hills 

With its little foamy points 

Like his twitching ears, 

Like his horns of silver 

Sparkling. 

The brook is his only friend 

When he travels . . . 

Silverhorn, Silverhorn! 

SPARKLING DROP OF WATER

The sun shone, 

All was still. 

The sun made one sparkle in one drop 

Before it fell 

Down into the mossy green 

That was the grass. 

It lay there silent 

A long time. 

The sun went, the moon came, 

Again one sparkle in the grass! 

Day then night, sun then moon, 

Year in, year out, 

So it went on with its life 

For several years 

Until at last it was never heard of 

Any more. 

HAYCOCK

This is another kind of sweetness 

Shaped like a beehive: 

This is the hive the bees have lefts 

It is from this cloverheap 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 45


They took away the honey 

For the other hive! 

ONLY MORNINGGLORY THAT FLOWERED

Under the vine I saw one morningglory 

A tight unfolding bud 

Half out. 

He looked hard down into my lettucebed. 

He was thinking hard. 

He said I want a friend! 

I was standing there: 

I said, Well, I am here! Don't you see me? 

But he thought and thought. 

The next day I found him happy, 

Quite out, 

Looking about the world. 

The wind blew sweet airs, 

Carried away his perfume in the sun; 

And near by swung a new flower 

Uncurling its hands . . . 

He was not thoughtful 

Any more! 

WEATHER

Weather is the answer 

When I can't go out into flowery places; 

Weather is my wonder 

About the kind of morning 

Hidden behind the hills of sky. 

SUMMERDAY SONG

Wild birds fly over me. 

I am not the blue curtain overhead, 

I am the one who lives under the sky. 

I swing to the treetops, 

I pick strawberries, 

I sing and play, 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 46


And happiness makes me like a great god 

On the earth. 

It makes me think of great things 

A little girl like me 

Could not know of. 

PINK ROSEPETALS

Pink rosepetals 

Fluttering down in hosts, 

I know what you mean 

Sometimes, in Spring. 

It is love you mean. 

Love has a gray bird 

That flutters down; 

A dove that comes flying 

Saying the same thing. 

How happy it makes me to think of it, 

Rosepetals . . . the gray dove . . . 

THE LONESOME GREEN APPLE

There was a little green apple 

That had lasted over winter. 

He had one leaf . . . 

In spite of that he was lonesome. 

He wondered what he could do 

When the blossoms were all around him, 

But one day he saw something! 

Petals were falling, faces were looking out, 

Shapes like his were coming in the buds; 

Then he said: 

"If I hold on 

There will be a treefull, 

and I shall know more than any of them!" 

I AM

I am willowy boughs 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 47


For coolness; 

I am goldfinch wings 

For darkness; 

I am a little grape 

Thinking of September, 

I am a very small violet 

Thinking of May. 

MUSHROOM SONG

Oh little mushrooms with brown faces underneath 

And bare white heads, 

You think of summer and you think of song . . . 

Why don't you think of me 

In my little white bed 

In the night? 

You think only of your singsong and your dances, 

Following your leader round and round, 

You think only of the grass 

And the green apples and leaves 

Dropping out of the blue . . . 

Why don't you think of me asleep 

In my little white bed? 

The wind thinks of me, 

Brownwhite dancers! 

You forget, 

But the wind remembers. 

THE APPLEJELLYFISHTREE

Down in the depths of the sea 

Grew the AppleJellyFishTree. 

It was named by a queer old robber 

And his mates three. 

I watched it for a second, 

I watched it for a day. 

It did not change color 

For its colors stay. 

It was as red, as yellow, as white, as blue 

As gold and stones with the light through! 

I watched it long and long 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 48


Till a flying sunfish 

Swam through its branches. 

He had opal wings 

And a sapphire tail. 

No wonder robbers like to stay 

Where fish so shining come to play! 

THREE LOVES

Angellove, 

Fairylove, 

Wavelove, 

Which will you choose? 

Angellove . . . goldenyellow and far white . . . 

Fairylove . . . golden yellow and green . . . 

Wavelove . . . scarlet and azure blue . . . 

Which will you choose? 

I will keep them in a box 

Locked with a twisted key. 

I will give them to people who need love, 

I will let them choose. 

Fairylove blows away like leaves. 

Angels I know little about. 

For myself I choose wavelove 

Because of the wind and the sea and my heart. 

THE FIELD OF WONDER

What could be more wonderful 

Than the place where I walk sometimes? 

Swaying like trees in rain . . . 

Swaying like trees in sunshine 

When breezes stir nothing but happiness . . . 

What could be more lovely? 

I walk in the Field of Wonder 

Where colors come to be; 

I stare at the sky . . . 

I feel myself lifting on the wind 

As the swallows lift and blow upward . . . 

I see colors fade out, they die away . . . 

I blow across a cloud . . . I am lifted . . . 

How can I change again into a little girl 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 49


When wings are in my feeling of gladness? 

This is strange to know 

On a summer day at noon, 

This is a wild new joy 

When summer is over. 

The scarlet of three maple trees 

Will guide me home, 

Oh mother my dear! 

Fear nothing: I will come home 

Before snow falls! 

MOON DOVES

The moon has a dovecote safe and small, 

Hid in the velvet sky: 

The doves are her companions sweet; 

She has no others. 

Moon doves on the wing are white 

As a valley of stars, 

When they fly, there is shining 

Like a golden river. 

I see so many whirling away and away, 

How can they get home again? 

The moon is calm and never wears an anxious look, 

She goes on smiling. 

I hear so many doves along the sky 

How will her dovecote hold them? 

The moon says not one word to me; 

She lets me wonder. 

I WENT TO SEA

I WENT to sea in a glassbottomed boat 

And found that the loveliest shells of all 

Are hidden below in valleys of sand. 

I saw coral and sponge and weed 

And bubbles like jewels dangling. 

I saw a creature with eyes of mist 

Go by slowly. 

Starfish fingers held the water . . . 

Let it go again . . . 

I saw little fish, the children of the sea; 

They were gay and busy. 

I wanted the seaweed purple; I wanted the shells; 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 50


I wanted a little fish to hold in my hands; 

I wanted the big fish to stop wandering about, 

And tell me all they knew . . . 

I have come back safe and dry 

And know no more secrets 

Than yesterday! 

THREE THOUGHTS OF MY HEART

As I was straying by the forest brook 

I heard my heart speak to me: 

Listen; said my heart, 

I have three thoughts for you . . . 

a thought of clouds, 

A thought of birds, 

A thought of flowers. 

I sat upon a cushion of moss, 

Listening, 

Where the light played, and the green shadows: 

What would you do . . . I asked my heart . . . 

If you were a floating ship of the sky . . . 

If you were a peering bird . . . 

If you were a wild geranium? 

And my heart made answer: 

That is what I wonder and wonder! 

After all it is life I love, 

After all l am a living thing, 

After all I am the heart of you . . . 

I am content! 

SNOWCAPPED MOUNTAIN

Snowcapped mountain, so white, so tall, 

The whole sea 

Must stand behind you! 

Snowcapped mountain, with the wind on your forehead, 

Do you hold the eagles' nests? 

Proud thing, 

You shine like a lily, 

Yet with a different whiteness; 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 51


I should not dare to venture 

Up your slippery towers, 

For I am thinking you lean too far 

Over the Edge of the World! 

THE BROOK AND ITS CHILDREN

O brook, running down your mossy way, 

I hear only your voice 

And the murmuring firtrees; 

Where are your children? 

Where are the magic stones, your children?" 

The brook answered me sweetly, 

"I left them on the Alp, 

In steep fields. 

They were trying to hold me back, 

To keep me from this shady path of happiness; 

But I went onward day by day 

Until they got used to seeing me pass. 

Now, they stand there in an enchantment 

On the mountainside, 

While I travel fields of elm and poplar." 

BIRD OF PARADISE

I was walking in a meadow of Paradise 

When I heard a singing 

Far away and sweet 

Like a Roman harp, 

Sweet and murmurous 

Like the wind, 

Far and soft 

Like the fir trees. 

It will not change a song 

If the bird has a golden crest; 

No feathers of blue and rosered 

Could make a song. 

I have known in my dreaming 

A gray bird that sang 

While all the fields listened! 

The Bird of Paradise is like flowers of many trees 

Blooming on one: 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 52


I saw him in the meadow, 

But it was the gray bird I heard singing 

Beyond and far. 

SHINY BROOK

Oh, shiny brook, 

I watch you on your way to the sea, 

And see little faces peering up 

Out of the water . . . 

Waterfairies 

Strange smiles and questions. 

They are your pebbles sweet, 

Golden with foam of the sun, 

Blue with foam of the sky. 

I know their way of speaking, 

Of talking to each other: 

I hear them telling secrets 

About green moss, about fish that get lost. 

And how I am sitting on a big stone 

Getting my feet wet in Shiny Brook 

To watch their surprising ways! 

HILLS

The hills are going somewhere; 

They have been on the way a long time. 

They are like camels in a line 

But they move more slowly. 

Sometimes at sunset they carry silks, 

But most of the time silver birch trees, 

Heavy rocks, heavy trees, gold leaves 

On heavy branches till they are aching . . . 

Birches like silver bars they can hardly lift 

With grass so thick about their feet to hinder . . . 

They have not gone far 

In the time I've watched them . . . 

ADVENTURE

I went slowly through the wood of shadows, 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 53


Thinking always I should meet some one: 

There was no one. 

I found a hollow 

Sweet to rest in all night long: 

I did not stay. 

I came out beyond the trees 

To the moaning sea. 

Over the sea swam a cloud the outline of a ship: 

What if that ship held my adventure 

Under its sails? 

Come quickly to me, come quickly, 

I am waiting. 

I am here on the sand; 

Sail close! 

I want to go over the waves . . . 

The sand holds me back. 

Oh adventure, if you belong to me, 

Don't blow away down the sky! 

FAIRIES

I cannot see fairies. 

I dream them. 

There is no fairy can hide from me; 

I keep on dreaming till I find him: 

There you are, Primrose! I see you, Black Wing! 

HUMMINGBIRD

Why do you stand on the air 

And no sun shining? 

How can you hold yourself so still 

On raindrops sliding? 

They change and fall, they are not steady, 

But you do not know they are gone. 

Is there a silver wire 

I cannot see? 

Is the wind your perch? 

Raindrops slide down your little shoulders . . . 

They do not wet you: 

I think you are not real 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Page No 54


In your green feathers! 

You are not a hummingbird at all 

Standing on air above the garden! 

I dreamed you the way I dream fairies, 

Or the flower I lost yesterday! 

BLUE GRASS

Blue grass flowering in the field, 

You are my heart's content. 

It is not only through the day I see you, 

But in dreams at night 

When you trudge up the hill 

Along the forest, 

As I do! 

You are small to shine so, 

Nobody speaks of you much, 

Because of daisies and such summer blooms. 

When you wonder why I like you 

It makes me wonder too! 

Maybe I remember when you grew high 

Like a tree above my head, 

Because I was a fairy. 

ENVOY

If I am happy, and you, 

And there are things to do, 

It seems to be the reason 

Of this world! 


Poems By a Little Girl

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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. Poems By a Little Girl, page = 6

   3. Hilda Conkling, page = 6

   4. FOR YOU, MOTHER, page = 8

   5. PREFACE, page = 8

6. FOUR TO FIVE YEARS OLD, page = 13

   7. FIRST SONGS, page = 13

8. FIVE TO SIX YEARS OLD, page = 14

   9. GARDEN OF THE WORLD, page = 15

   10. THEATRE-SONG, page = 15

   11. VELVETS, page = 15

   12. TWO SONGS, page = 16

   13. MOON SONG, page = 17

   14. SUNSET, page = 17

   15. MOUSE, page = 17

   16. SHORT STORY, page = 18

   17. BY LAKE CHAMPLAIN, page = 18

   18. SPRING SONG, page = 18

   19. WATER, page = 19

   20. SHADY BRONN, page = 19

   21. CHICKADEE, page = 20

   22. THE CHAMPLAIN SANDMAN, page = 20

   23. ROSE-MOSS, page = 20

   24. ABOUT MY DREAMS, page = 21

25. SIX TO SEVEN YEARS OLD, page = 22

   26. AUTUMN SONG, page = 22

   27. THE DREAM, page = 22

   28. BUTTERFLY, page = 23

   29. EVENING, page = 23

   30. THUNDER SHOWER, page = 23

   31. RED CROSS SONG, page = 24

   32. PURPLE ASTERS, page = 24

   33. SONG FOR A PLAY, page = 24

   34. PEACOCK FEATHERS, page = 25

   35. RED ROOSTER, page = 25

   36. TREE-TOAD, page = 25

37. SEVEN TO NINE YEARS OLD, page = 26

   38. THE LONESOME WAVE, page = 26

   39. RED-CAP MOSS, page = 27

   40. RAMBLER ROSE, page = 27

   41. GIFT, page = 27

   42. THE WHITE CLOUD, page = 28

   43. MOON THOUGHT, page = 28

   44. THE OLD BRIDGE, page = 28

   45. FERNS, page = 29

   46. LAND OF NOD, page = 29

   47. SUN FLOWERS, page = 29

   48. HOLLAND SONG, page = 30

   49. FOUNTAIN-TALK, page = 30

   50. POPLARS, page = 31

   51. THE TOWER AND THE FALCON, page = 31

   52. THOUGHTS, page = 31

   53. POEM-SKETCH IN THREE PARTS, page = 32

   54. THE DEW-LIGHT, page = 33

   55. YELLOW SUMMER-THROAT, page = 33

   56. PEGASUS, page = 34

   57. VENICE BRIDGE, page = 34

   58. NIGHT GOES RUSHING BY, page = 35

   59. DANDELION, page = 35

   60. IF I COULD TELL YOU THE WAY, page = 35

   61. ROSE-PETAL, page = 36

   62. POEMS, page = 36

   63. SEAGARDE, page = 36

   64. EASTER, page = 37

   65. BLUEBIRD, page = 37

   66. GEOGRAPHY, page = 37

   67. MARCH THOUGHT, page = 38

   68. MORNING, page = 38

   69. SONG, page = 38

   70. SNOWFLAKE SONG, page = 39

   71. SNOWSTORM, page = 39

   72. POPPY, page = 39

   73. BUTTERFLY, page = 40

   74. CLOUDS, page = 40

   75. NARCISSUS, page = 40

   76. LITTLE SNAIL, page = 41

   77. CHERRIES ARE RIPE, page = 41

   78. A THING FORGOTTEN, page = 41

   79. LITTLE PAPOOSE:, page = 42

   80. FAIRIES AGAIN, page = 42

   81. OH, MY HAZEL-EYED MOTHER, page = 42

   82. THE GREEN PALM TREE, page = 43

   83. TREASURE, page = 43

   84. TWO PICTURES, page = 44

   85. TELL ME, page = 44

   86. SILVERHORN, page = 44

   87. SPARKLING DROP OF WATER, page = 45

   88. HAY-COCK, page = 45

   89. ONLY MORNING-GLORY THAT FLOWERED, page = 46

   90. WEATHER, page = 46

   91. SUMMER-DAY SONG, page = 46

   92. PINK ROSE-PETALS, page = 47

   93. THE LONESOME GREEN APPLE, page = 47

   94. I AM, page = 47

   95. MUSHROOM SONG, page = 48

   96. THE APPLE-JELLY-FISH-TREE, page = 48

   97. THREE LOVES, page = 49

   98. THE FIELD OF WONDER, page = 49

   99. MOON DOVES, page = 50

   100. I WENT TO SEA, page = 50

   101. THREE THOUGHTS OF MY HEART, page = 51

   102. SNOW-CAPPED MOUNTAIN, page = 51

   103. THE BROOK AND ITS CHILDREN, page = 52

   104. BIRD OF PARADISE, page = 52

   105. SHINY BROOK, page = 53

   106. HILLS, page = 53

   107. ADVENTURE, page = 53

   108. FAIRIES, page = 54

   109. HUMMING-BIRD, page = 54

   110. BLUE GRASS, page = 55

   111. ENVOY, page = 55