Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
Fires in Illinois
By John James Piatt (18351917)H
While the wild twilight clings around,
Clothing the grasses everywhere,
With scarce a dream of sound!
With many a silent-leaping spire,
Seems a dark shore,—a sea of flame,—
Quick, crawling waves of fire!
October breathing low and chill,
And watch the far-off blaze that leaps
At the wind’s wayward will.
Sea-like in vanished summers stir;
From vanished autumns comes the Fire,—
A lone, bright harvester!
Wild steeds, fierce herds of bison here,
And, blown before the flying flame,
The flying-footed deer!
Along red twilights sinking slow)
Whose wheels grew weary on their way,
Far westward, long ago;
That, long ago, streamed wildly past;
Faces from that bright solitude
In the hot gleam aghast!
No history after or before,
Inside the horizon with the flames,
The flames,—nobody more!
Sudden and swift and fierce and bright;
Another gentler vision fills
The solitude, to-night:
The sunshine rocks on windy maize;
Hark, everywhere are busy men,
And children at their plays!
From villages of quiet born,
And, far and near, and everywhere,
Homes stand amid the corn.
Makes all the vast horizon glow,
But, numberless as the stars above,
The windows shine below!