SPRING IN THE DESERT

SPRING IN THE DESERT

Silence, and the heat lights shimmer like a mist of sifted silver,Down across the wide, low washes where the strange sand rivers flow;Brown and sun-baked, quiet, waveless, trailed with bleaching, flood-swept bowlders;Rippled into mimic water where the restless whirlwinds go.On the banks the gray mesquite trees droop their slender, lace-leafed branches;Fill the lonely air with fragrance, as a beauty unconfessed;Till the wild quail comes at sunset with her timorous, plumed covey,And the iris-throated pigeon coos above her hidden nest.Every shrub distills vague sweetness; every poorest leaf has gatheredSome rare breath to tell its gladness in a fitter way than speech;Here the silken cactus blossoms flaunt their rose and gold and crimson,And the proud zahuaro lifts its pearl-carved crown from careless reach.Like to Lillith’s hair down-streaming, soft and shining, glorious, golden,Sways the queenly palo verde robed and wreathed in golden flowers;And the spirits of dead lovers might have joy again togetherWhere the honey-sweet acacia weaves its shadow-fretted bowers.Velvet-soft and glad and tender goes the night wind down the cañons,Touching lightly every petal, rocking leaf and bud and nest;Whispering secrets to the black bees dozing in the tall wild lilies,Till it hails the sudden sunrise trailing down the mountain’s crest.Silence, sunshine, heat lights painting opal-tinted dream and visionDown across the wide, low washes where the whirlwinds wheel and swing;—What of dead hands, sun-dried, bleaching? What of heat and thirst and madness?Death and life are lost, forgotten, in the wonder of the spring.


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