Archive for the 'louise chandler moulton' Category

A Painted Fan by Louise Chandler Moulton

I’ve only posted one of Moulton’s before, so here’s another.

A Painted Fan
By Louise Chandler Moulton

Roses and butterflies snared on a fan,
   All that is left of a summer gone by;
Of swift, bright wings that flashed in the sun,
   And loveliest blossoms that bloomed to die!

By what subtle spell did you lure them here,
   Fixing a beauty that will not change,—
Roses whose petals never will fall,
   Bright, swift wings that never will range?

Had you owned but the skill to snare as well
   The swift-winged hours that came and went,
To prison the words that in music died,
   And fix with a spell the heart’s content,

Then had you been of magicians the chief;
   And loved and lovers should bless your art,
If you could but have painted the soul of the thing,—
   Not the rose alone, but the rose’s heart!

Flown are those days with their winged delights,
   As the odor is gone from the summer rose;
Yet still, whenever I wave my fan,
   The soft, south wind of memory blows.

Louisa My Alcott by Louise Chandler Moulton

Louisa May Alcott is one of my favorite authors. During the Civil War she went to Washington to nurse the wounded and contracted typhoid. They treated her with some form of mercury, and, though she nearly died, she did recover. However, she was in ill health for the rest of her life.

Louisa May Alcott
In Memoriam
By Louise Chandler Moulton

As the wind at play with a spark
   Of fire that glows through the night,
As the speed of the soaring lark
   That wings to the sky his flight,
So swiftly thy soul has sped
   On its upward, wonderful way,
Like the lark, when the dawn is red,
   In search of the shining day.

Thou art not with the frozen dead
   Whom earth in the earth we lay,
While the bearers softly tread,
   And the mourners kneel and pray;
From thy semblance, dumb and stark,
   The soul has taken its flight—
Out of the finite dark,
   Into the Infinite Light.