A SUMMER AIR
O WAVING trees
And waving wind
And waving seas
And waving mind—
Where, far and wide,
Am I to roam
To find my bride,
To reach my home?
My soul is my Bride:
Ah, whither fled?
She hath not died,
Nor am I dead:
But somehow, somewhere,
A song she heard.
And she flashed thro’ the air
A sunfire bird.
My bride, she is
Where the rainbows are;
Sweet, sweet her kiss
Awaits afar:
105
My goal is where
The sea-waves meet
The Sands of Youth
Stirred by her feet.
O waving leaves,
O waving grass,
My heart grieves
That it may not pass.
‘Summer is fleet,
Summer is long,’—
I know not, Sweet,
‘Tis an empty Song.
Where, far and wide,
Across what foam,
On what strange tide,
Shall I be come?
Meet me, O Bride,
Where, lost, I roam:
Leap to my side
And lead me home!
MLA citation:
Macleod, Fiona. “A Summer Air.” The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal, vol. 3, Summer 1896, pp. 104-105. Evergreen Digital Edition, edited by Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2016-2018. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/egv3_macleod_air/