- Prologue
- In the Shadow of the Beeches
- A Fallen Beech
- A Coigne of the Forest
- A House in the Hills
- The Wind
- Rain in the Woods
- Heat
- Young September
- The Vintager
- Black Vesper’s Pageants
- A Twilight Moth
- The Grasshopper
- Forest and Field
- Summer
- Indian Summer
- To Sorrow
- Night
- The Haunted House
- Autumn
- Along the Ohio
- The Old Inn
- The Mill-Water
- The Dream
- Spring Twilight
- A Sleet-Storm in May
- The Heart O’ Spring
- ''A Broken Rainbow on the Skies of May''
- Orgie
- The Farmstead
- The Boy Columbus
- North Beach, Florida
- The Storm
- On the Jellico Spur of the Cumberlands
- The Whippoorwill
- In the Wildwood
- A Hollow of the Hills
- Beneath the Beeches
- The Bridle-Path
- The Old Farm
- To Summer
- A Gray Day
- The Mood O’ the Earth
- Nooning
- The Log-Bridge
- Among the Knobs
- The Falls of the Ohio
- Fall Fancies
- Late October
- A November Walk
- The White Evening
- Dreams
- The Brook
- The Old Swing
- To Autumn
- Winter Dreams
- A Flower of the Fields
- On Stony-Run
- Home
- Dusk in the Woods
- Comrades
- The Rock
- Standing-Stone Creek
- ''Clouds of the Autumn Night''
- Then and Now
- By the Trysting-Beech
- After Long Grief and Pain
- The Haunted Woodland
- Comradery
- Occult
- Wood-Words
- The Wind at Night
- Airy Tongues
- Rain and Wind
- Under Arcturus
- Bare Boughs
- A Threnody
- Snow
- An Old Song
- Baby Mary
- A Sunset Fancy
- The Fen-Fire
- The Wood
- Wood Notes
- Hills of the West
- The Wind of Spring
- The Willow Bottom
- The Red-Bird
- Clearing
- Autumn Sorrow
- A Dark Day of Summer
- Days and Days
- Drouth in Autumn
- In Summer
- In Winter
- On the Farm
- Paths
- A Song in Season
- Before the End
- Hoar-Frost
- Cold
- The Winter Moon
- The Hillside Grave
- The Covered Bridge
- The Creek-Road
- Abandoned
- Omens
- Imperfection
- Arcana
- Fulfillment
- Too Late
- The Witch
- The Somnambulist
- Opium
- Music and Sleep
- Ambition
- Despondency
- Despair
- Quatrains
- A Last Word
- Foreword
- The Cricket
- The Tree Toad
- The Screech-Owl
- The Chipmunk
- The Wild Iris
- The Path by the Creek
- Along the Stream
- Voices
- The Road Home
- Drouth
- The Broken Drouth
- Feud
- Unanointed
- Sunset and Storm
- Beech Blooms
- Worship
- Unheard
- Reincarnation
- On Chenoweth’s Run
- Requiescat
- The Quest
- Before the Rain
- After Rain
- Sunset Clouds
- Riches
- The Age of Gold
- A Song for Labor
- The Love of Loves
- Three Things
- Immortelles
- A Lullaby
- Pestilence
- Musings
- The Message of the Lilies
- Anthem of Dawn
- At the Lane’s End
- Enchantment
- In the Forest
- Can Such Things Be
- Knight-Errant
- The Artist
- Poetry and Philosophy
- ''Quo Vadis''
- To a Critic
- Quatrains
- The Dreamer
- Winter
- Mid-Winter
- Spring
- Transformation
- Response
- The Swashbuckler
- Simulacra
- The Bluebird
- Caverns
- Proem
- A Voice on the Wind
- The Land of Hearts Made Whole
- The Wind of Summer
- The Wind of Winter
- The Leaf-Cricket
- The Owlet
- The Poet
- Summer Noontide
- To the Locust
- July
- Evening on the Farm
- Under the Hunter’s Moon
- In the Lane
- Epiphany
- Life
- Meeting in the Woods
- Rose and Rue
- A Maid Who Died Old
- Communicants
- The Dead Day
- Allurement
- August
- The Bush-Sparrow
- Quiet
- Music
- A Dream Shape
- The Old Barn
- The Wood Witch
- May
- Rain
- Fall
- Sunset in Autumn
- Content
- October
- Discovery
- The Old Spring
- The Forest Spring
- The Hills
- The Song of the Thrush
- Transmutation
- Frost
- Adventurers
- Invocation
- The Death of Love
- Unanswered
- Love, The Interpreter
- Love Despised
- Pearls
- The Woman Speaks
- Of the Slums
- Light and Wind
- The Winds
- Touches
- Earth and Moon
- Dusk
- September
- The End of Summer
- The Passing Glory
- Prototypes
- Superstition
- A. D. Nineteen Hundred
- Uncalled
- Quatrains
- Afterword
This is Volume 3: Nature Poems of the collected works of Madison Julius Cawein, an American poet from Kentucky. It's arranged in four sections: In The Shadow of the Beeches, Tansy and Sweet-Alyssum, Weeds by the Wall, and A Voice on the Wind. It is dedicated to "Doctor Henry A. Cottel whose kind words of friendship and approval have encouraged me most when I most needed encouragement."
- Summary by Larry Wilson
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