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Poems

Chapter 48: IN THE WINDOW
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About This Book

A varied collection of lyric and narrative verse that moves between short songs, sonnets, rondels, and longer meditative pieces. Many poems use pastoral and seasonal imagery to celebrate fields, harvest, and the sensory life of the natural world while also acknowledging the hardships and dignity of rural labor. Recurring themes include love, absence, memory, and spiritual longing, treated with formal variety and musical language. The tone alternates between celebratory, elegiac, and reflective, blending vivid description with moral and emotional observation.

IN THE WINDOW

Oh ... my love comes to me to-night,
After the weary days.
And I must trim the candle bright
And light a cheerful blaze.
Then close within the window stand,
As down the silent streets
My heart shall hear his coming, and
How it knows, and beats!
His footstep falls from stair to stair,
(Oh my love is my own!)
I wear a ribbon in my hair
That only he has known.
His kiss upon my palms he left;
I hold its message, still.
Long days have made his soul bereft,
To-night ... he takes his fill!
In winter-time, in summer too,
In sunshine, and in rain.
Love waits for love, the wide world thro’.
(Alas ... for watches vain!)
As in my window, hid I stand;
(Would all so blest might be!)
His step is on the threshold, and
My love has come to me.