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Home  »  The World’s Best Poetry  »  Spring Song

Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.

Poems of Home: IV. Youth

Spring Song

Bliss Carman (1861–1929)

MAKE me over, mother April,

When the sap begins to stir!

When thy flowery hand delivers

All the mountain-prisoned rivers,

And thy great heart beats and quivers

To revive the days that were,

Make me over, mother April,

When the sap begins to stir!

Take my dust and all my dreaming,

Count my heart-beats one by one,

Send them where the winters perish;

Then some golden noon recherish

And restore them in the sun,

Flower and scent and dust and dreaming,

With their heart-beats every one!

Set me in the urge and tide-drift

Of the streaming hosts a-wing!

Breast of scarlet, throat of yellow,

Raucous challenge, wooings mellow—

Every migrant is my fellow,

Making northward with the spring.

Loose me in the urge and tide-drift

Of the streaming hosts a-wing!

Shrilling pipe or fluting whistle,

In the valleys come again;

Fife of frog and call of tree-toad,

All my brothers, five or three-toed,

With their revel no more vetoed,

Making music in the rain;

Shrilling pipe or fluting whistle,

In the valleys come again.

Make me of thy seed to-morrow,

When the sap begins to stir!

Tawny light-foot, sleepy bruin,

Bright-eyes in the orchard ruin,

Gnarl the good life goes askew in,

Whiskey-jack, or tanager,—

Make me anything to-morrow,

When the sap begins to stir!

Make me even (How do I know?)

Like my friend the gargoyle there;

It may be the heart within him

Swells that doltish hands should pin him

Fixed forever in mid-air.

Make me even sport for swallows,

Like the soaring gargoyle there!

Give me the old clue to follow,

Through the labyrinth of night!

Clod of clay with heart of fire,

Things that burrow and aspire,

With the vanishing desire,

For the perishing delight,—

Only the old clue to follow,

Through the labyrinth of night!

Make me over, mother April,

When the sap begins to stir!

Fashion me from swamp or meadow,

Garden plot or ferny shadow,

Hyacinth or humble burr!

Make me over, mother April,

When the sap begins to stir!

Let me hear the far, low summons,

When the silver winds return;

Rills that run and streams that stammer,

Goldenwing with his loud hammer,

Icy brooks that brawl and clamor

Where the Indian willows burn;

Let me hearken to the calling,

When the silver winds return,

Till recurring and recurring,

Long since wandered and come back,

Like a whim of Grieg’s or Gounod’s,

This same self, bird, bud, or Bluenose,

Some day I may capture (Who knows?)

Just the one last joy I lack,

Waking to the far new summons,

When the old spring winds come back.

For I have no choice of being,

When the sap begins to climb,—

Strong insistence, sweet intrusion,

Vasts and verges of illusion,—

So I win, to time’s confusion,

The one perfect pearl of time,

Joy and joy and joy forever,

Till the sap forgets to climb!

Make me over in the morning

From the rag-bag of the world!

Scraps of dream and duds of daring,

Home-brought stuff from far sea-faring,

Faded colors once so flaring,

Shreds of banners long since furled!

Hues of ash and glints of glory,

In the rag-bag of the world!

Let me taste the old immortal

Indolence of life once more;

Not recalling nor foreseeing,

Let the great slow joys of being

Well my heart through as of yore!

Let me taste the old immortal

Indolence of life once more!

Give me the old drink for rapture,

The delirium to drain,

All my fellows drank in plenty

At the Three Score Inns and Twenty

From the mountains to the main!

Give me the old drink for rapture,

The delirium to drain!

Only make me over, April,

When the sap begins to stir!

Make me man or make me woman,

Make me oaf or ape or human,

Cup of flower or cone of fir;

Make me anything but neuter

When the sap begins to stir!