SARAH GREENLEAF, of eighteen years, Stepped lightly her bridegroom's boat within, Waving mid-river, through smiles and tears, A farewell back to her kith and kin. With her sweet blue eyes and her new gold gown, She sat by her stalwart lover's side -- Oh, never was brought to Haverhill town By land or water so fair a bride. Glad as the glad autumnal weather, The Indian summer so soft and warm, They walked through the golden woods together, His arm the girdle about her form. They passed the dam and the gray gristmill, Whose walls with the jar of grinding shook, And crossed, for the moment a wed and still, The haunted bridge of the Country Brook. The great oaks seemed on Job's Hill crown To wave in welcome their branches strong, And an upland streamlet came rippling down Over root and rock, like a bridal song. And lo! in the midst of a clearing stood The rough-built farmhouse, low and lone, While all about it the unhewn wood Seemed drawing closer to claim its own. But the red apples dropped from orchard trees, The red cock crowed on the low fence rail, From the garden hives came the sound of bees, On the barn floor pealed the smiting flail. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE BUSY HEART by RUPERT BROOKE THE PURPLE COW by FRANK GELETT BURGESS A CHILD'S PET by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES A NOCTURNAL REVERIE by ANNE FINCH IRELAND; A SEASIDE PORTRAIT by JOHN JAMES PIATT |