Morning on Shinnecock

Olivia Ward Bush-Banks 1869 (Sag Harbor, Long Island) – 1944 (United States)



The rising sun had crowned the hills,
            And added beauty to the plain;
O grand and wondrous spectacle!
            That only nature could explain.

I stood within a leafy grove,
            And gazed around in blissful awe;
The sky appeared one mass of blue,
            That seemed to spread from sea to shore.

Far as the human eye could see,
            Were stretched the fields of waving corn.
Soft on my ear the warbling birds
            Were heralding the birth of morn.

While here and there a cottage quaint
            Seemed to repose in quiet ease
Amid the trees, whose leaflets waved
            And fluttered in the passing breeze.

O morning hour! so dear thy joy,
            And how I longed for thee to last;
But e’en thy fading into day
            Brought me an echo of the past.

 ‘Twas this,—how fair my life began;
            How pleasant was its hour of dawn;
But, merging into sorrow’s day,
            Then beauty faded with the morn.
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Submitted by naama on July 13, 2020

Modified on April 16, 2023

46 sec read
11

Quick analysis:

Scheme XAXA XXXX XBXB XCXC XDED XXEB
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 952
Words 155
Stanzas 6
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4

Olivia Ward Bush-Banks

Olivia Ward Bush-Banks (née Olivia Ward; May 23, 1869 – 1944) was an American author, poet and journalist of African-American and Montaukett Native American descent. Ward celebrated both of her heritages in her poetry and writing. She was a regular contributor to the Colored American magazine and wrote a column for the New Rochelle, New York publication, the Westchester Record-Courier.  more…

All Olivia Ward Bush-Banks poems | Olivia Ward Bush-Banks Books

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