"CASSANDER! @3O@1 Cassander!" -- her mother's voice seems cle'r As ever, from the old back-porch, a-hollerin' fer her -- Especially in airly Spring -- like May, two year' ago -- @3Last@1 time she hollered fer her, -- and Cassander didn't hear! Cassander was so chirpy-like and sociable and free, And good to ever'body, and wuz even good to me Though @3I@1 wuz jes' a common -- well, a farm-hand, don't you know, A-workin' on her father's place, as pore as pore could be! Her bein' jes' a' only child, Cassander had her way A good-'eal more'n other girls; and neighbers ust to say She looked most like her Mother, but wuz turned most like her Pap, -- Except @3he@1 had no use fer @3town@1-folks then -- ner @3yit to-day!@1 I can't claim she incouraged @3me:@1 She'd let me drive her in To town sometimes, on Saturd'ys, and fetch her home ag'in, Tel onc't she 'scused "Old Moll" and me, -- and some blame' city-chap, @3He@1 driv her home, two-forty style, in face o' kith-and-kin. She even tried to make him stay fer supper, but I 'low He must 'a' kind o' 'spicioned some objections. -- Anyhow, Her mother callin' at her, whilst her father stood and shook His fist, -- the town-chap turnt his team and made his partin' bow. "Cassander! @3You,@1 Cassander!" -- hear her mother jes' as plain, And see Cassander blushin' like the peach tree down the lane, Whilse I sneaked on apast her, with a sort o' hang-dog look, A-feelin' cheap as sorghum and as green as sugar-cane! (You see, I'd @3skooted@1 when she met her @3town@1-beau -- when, in fact, Ef I'd had sense I'd @3stayed@1 fer her. -- But sense wuz what I lacked! So I'd cut home ahead o' her, so's I could tell 'em what Wuz keepin' her. And -- @3you@1 know how a jealous fool'll act!) I past her, I wuz sayin', -- but she never turnt her head; I swallered-like and cle'red my th'oat -- but that wuz all I said; And whilse I hoped fer some word back, it wuzn't what I got. -- That girl'll not stay stiller on the day she's layin' dead! Well, that-air silence @3lasted!@1 -- Ust to listen ever' day I'd be at work and hear her mother callin' thataway; I'd @3sight@1 Cassander, mayby, cuttin' home acrost the blue And drizzly fields; but nary answer -- nary word to say! Putt in about two weeks o' that -- two weeks o' rain and mud, Er mostly so: I couldn't plow. The old crick like a flood: And, lonesome as a borried dog, I'd wade them old woods through -- The dogwood blossoms white as snow, and redbuds red as blood. @3Last@1 time her mother called her -- sich a morning like as now: The robins and the bluebirds, and the blossoms on the bough -- And this wuz yit 'fore brekfust, with the sun out at his best, And hosses kickin' in the barn -- and dry enough to plow. "Cassander! @3O@1 Cassander!" . . . And her only answer -- What? -- A letter, twisted round the cook-stove damper, smokin'-hot, A-statin': "I wuz married on that day of all the rest, The day my husband fetched me home -- ef you ain't all fergot!" "Cassander! @3O@1 Cassander!" seems, allus, 'long in May, I hear her mother callin' her -- a-callin', night and day -- "Cassander! @3O@1 Cassander!" allus callin', as I say, "Cassander! @3O@1 Cassander!" jes' a-callin' thataway. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NORTH WIND TO DUTIFUL BEAST MIDWAY BETWEEN DIAL & FOOT OF GARDEN CLOCK by MARIANNE MOORE AN EPITAPH by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE A LITTLE DUTCH GARDEN by HARRIET WHITNEY DURBIN TO THE WATER NYMPHS DRINKING AT THE FOUNTAIN by ROBERT HERRICK A SHROPSHIRE LAD: 35 by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN |