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Cape Cod Ballads, and Other Verse

Chapter 83: AT EVENTIDE
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About This Book

A varied collection of short lyrical and comic poems evokes life along a New England shore, alternating ballads of fishermen and lifesavers with affectionate sketches of village characters, church gatherings, and family scenes. Many pieces employ local dialect and vivid comic detail to render seasonal rhythms, seafaring hazards, rural chores, and small‑town ceremonies, while others register quieter moments of memory, nature, and longing. Plainspoken narrative and rhythmic verse combine to create a strong sense of place and community, blending sentiment, humor, and occasional moral reflection.





SUNSET-LAND

  Climb to my knee, little boy, little boy,—
    If you look, as the sun sinks low,
  Where the cloud-hills rise in the western skies,
    Each one with its crest aglow,
  O'er the rosy sea, where the purple isles
    Have beaches of golden sand,
  To the fleecy height of the great cloud, white,
  You may catch a gleam of the twinkling light
    At the harbor of Sunset-land.

  It's a wonderful place, little boy, little boy,
    And its city is Sugarplum Town,
  Where the slightest breeze through the candy trees
    Will tumble the bon-bons down;
  Where the fountains sprinkle their lemonade
    In syrupy, cooling streams;
  And they pave each street with a goody, sweet,
  And mark them off in a manner neat,
    With borders of chocolate creams.

  It's a children's town, little boy, little boy,
    With a great big jail, you know,
  Where "grown-ups" stay who are heard to say,
    "Now don't!" or "You mustn't do so."
  And half of the time it is Fourth of July,
    And 'tis Christmas all the rest,
  With plenty of toys that will make a noise,
  For Santa is king of this realm of joys,
    And knows what a lad likes best.

  Shall I tell you the way, little boy, little boy,
    To get to this country, bright?
  When you're snug in bed, and your prayers are said,
    You must shut up your eyelids tight;
  And wait till the sleepy old Sandman comes
    And gives you his kindly hand,
  And then you'll float in a drowsy boat,
  O'er the sea of rose to the cloud, remote,
    And the wonderful Sunset-land.






THE SURF ALONG THE SHORE

  Ye children of the mountain, sing of your craggy peaks,
  Your valleys forest laden, your cliffs where Echo speaks;
  And ye, who by the prairies your childhood's joys have seen,
  Sing of your waving grasses, your velvet miles of green:
  But when my memory wanders down to the dear old home
  I hear, amid my dreaming, the seething of the foam,
  The wet wind through the pine trees, the sobbing crash and roar,
  The mighty surge and thunder of the surf along the shore.

  I see upon the sand-dunes the beach-grass sway and swing,
  I see the whirling sea-birds sweep by on graceful wing,
  I see the silver breakers leap high on shoal and bar,
  And hear the bell-buoy tolling his lonely note afar.
  The green salt-meadows fling me their salty, sweet perfume,
  I hear, through miles of dimness, the watchful fog-horn boom;
  Once more, beneath the blackness of night's great roof-tree high,
  The wild geese chant their marches athwart the arching sky.

  The dear old Cape! I love it! I love its hills of sand,
  The sea-wind singing o'er it, the seaweed on its strand;
  The bright blue ocean 'round it, the clear blue sky o'erhead;
  The fishing boats, the dripping nets, the white sails filled and spread;—
  For each heart has its picture, and each its own home song,
  The sights and sounds which move it when Youth's fair memories throng;
  And when, down dreamland pathways, a boy, I stroll once more,
  I hear the mighty music of the surf along the shore.






AT EVENTIDE

  The tired breezes are tucked to rest
    In the cloud-beds far away;
  The waves are pressed to the placid breast
    Of the dreaming, gleaming bay;
  The shore line swims in a hazy heat,
    Asleep in the sea and sky,
  And the muffled beat where the breakers meet
    Is a soft, sweet lullaby.

  The pine-clad hill has a crimson crown
    Of glittering sunset glows;
  The roofs of brown in the distant town
    Are bathed in a blush of rose;
  The radiant ripples shine and shift
    In shimmering shreds of gold;
  The seaweeds lift and drowse and drift,
    And the jellies fill and fold.

  The great sun sinks, and the gray fog heaps
    His cloak on the silent sea;
  The night-wind creeps where the ocean sleeps,
    And the wavelets wake in glee;
  Across the bay, like a silver star,
    There twinkles the harbor-light,
  And faint and far from the outer bar
    The sea-birds call "Good-night."







INDEX TO FIRST LINES

  A cloud of cinder-dotted smoke, whose billows rise and swell

  A solemn Sabbath stillness lies along the Mudville lanes

  A stretch of hill and valley, swathed thick in robes of white

  Almost every other evenin', jest as reg'lar as the clock

  "Blessed are the poor in spirit": there, I'll just remember that

  Climb to my knee, little boy, little boy,—

  For years I've seen the frothy lines go thund'rin' down the shore

  From the window of the chapel softly sounds an organ's note

  Grandfather's "summer sweets" are ripe

  He ain't no gold-laced "Belvidere"

  Hey, you swelled-up turkey feller!

  Home from college came the stripling, calm and cool and debonair

  I hain't no great detective, like yer read about,—the kind

  I never was naturally vicious;

  I remember, when a youngster, all the happy hours I spent

  I s'pose I hain't progressive, but I swan, it seems ter me

  I'll write, for I'm witty, a popular ditty

  I'm pretty nearly certain that 't was 'bout two weeks ago,—

  I've got a little yaller dog, a wuthless kind of chap

  In Mother's room still stands the chair

  In the gleam and gloom of the April weather

  It's a wonderful world we're in, my dear

  It's alone in the dark of the old wagon-shed

  It's getting on ter winter now, the nights are crisp and chill

  It stands at the bend where the road has its end

  Jason White has come ter town

  Just a simple little picture of a sunny country road

  Kind er like a stormy day, take it all together,—

  Little bare feet, sunburned and brown,

  Little foot, whose lightest pat

  Me and Billy's in the woodshed; Ma said, "Run out-doors and play;

  My dream-ship's decks are of beaten gold

  My sister's best feller is 'most six-foot-three

  My son Hezekiah's a painter; yes, that's the purfession he's at;

  Now Councilman O'Hoolihan do'n't b'lave in annixation

  O, it's Christmas Eve, and moonlight, and the Christmas air is chill

  O you boys grown gray and bearded, you that used ter chum with me

  Oh, the cool September mornin's! now they 're with us once agin

  Oh, the Friday evening meetings in the vestry, long ago

  Oh! the horns are all a-tootin' as we rattle through the town

  Oh, the song of the Sea—

  Oh, the story-book boy! he's a wonderful youth

  Oh, the wild November wind

  Oh! they've swept the parlor carpet, and they've dusted every chair

  Oh, those sweet old-fashioned posies, that were mother's pride and joy

  Old Dan'l Hanks he says this town

  On a log behind the pigsty of a modest little farm

  Once, by the edge of a pleasant pool

  Our Aunt 'Mandy thinks that boys

  Our Sary Emma is possessed ter be at somethin' queer;

  Pavements a-frying in street and in square

  Say, I've got a little brother

  She's little and modest and purty

  Sometimes when we're in school, and it's the afternoon and late

  South Pokus is religious,—that's the honest, livin' truth;

  Summer nights at Grandpa's—ain't they soft and still!

  Sun like a furnace hung up overhead

  Sure, Felix McCarty he lived all alone

  The fog was so thick yer could cut it

  The spring sun flashes a rapier thrust

  The tired breezes are tucked to rest

  To my office window, gray

  Up in the attic I found them, locked in the cedar chest

  Want to see me, hey, old chap?

  We'd never thought of takin' 'em,—'twas Mary Ann's idee,—

  When Ezry, that's my sister's son, came home from furrin parts

  When Papa's sick, my goodness sakes!

  When the farm work's done, at the set of sun

  When the great, gray fog comes in, and the damp clouds cloak the shore

  When the hot summer daylight is dyin'

  When the Lord breathes his wrath above the bosom of the waters

  When the tide goes out, how the foam-flakes dance

  When the toil of day is over

  When Twilight her soft robe of shadow spreads down

  Where leap the long Atlantic swells

  Where the warm spring sunlight, streaming

  Ye children of the mountain, sing of your craggy peaks

  You know the story—it's centuries old—
THE END