AS though Priscilla had smoothed out the frown
About This Book
The collection gathers short lyrical poems and sonnets that meditate on seasonal change, love and its vicissitudes, friendship and parting, aspiration and disappointment, and quiet domestic and natural scenes. Many pieces favor intimate first-person reflection, blending pastoral imagery—gardens, birds, waves, and twilight—with moral and spiritual concerns about faith, striving, and memory. Varied short forms, occasional rondeau and sonnet sequences, produce compact musicality and a tone alternating between wistfulness and gentle affirmation, while recurring motifs of journey, secret longing, and consolation knit the individual lyrics into a unified contemplative arc.
She had for all things that were worldly-wise—
As though she stood again ’neath softer skies
Than on the bleak New England rocks looked down,
And all the sorrows of that time could drown,—
Thus comes one, unaustere, with kindly eyes,
Stepping from out the past’s dim tapestries,
A Puritan with purity her crown.
Yet, not the shy reserve that marks her ways
Nor lines of strength denoted in her face
O’er which the sweetest light ’neath heaven plays,
Compel our love, but traces of the race
That passes down its grandeur to our days,
Seeking the good and spurning all things base!