Jack In The Pulpit

jack in the pulpit

Preaches today
Under the green trees
Just over the way.
Squirrels and song-sparrow
High on their perch
Hear the sweet lily-bells
Ringing to church.
Come, hear what his reverence
Rises to say,
In his low, painted pulpit
This calm Sabbath day.

Fair is the canopy
Over him seen,
Penciled by Nature’s hand,
Black, brown and green.
Green is his surplice,
Green are his bands;
In his queer little pulpit
The little priest stands.
In black and gold velvet,
So gorgeous to see,
Comes with his bass voice
The chorister bee.

Green fingers playing
Unseen on wind-lyres—
Low singing bird voices—
These are his choirs.
The violets are deacons—
I know by the sign
That the cups which they carry
Are purple with wine;
And the columbines bravely
As sentinels stand
On the lookout with all their
Red trumpets in hand.

Meek-faced anemones,
Drooping and sad;
Great yellow violets,
Smiling out glad;
Buttercups’ faces,
Beaming and bright;
Clovers, with bonnets—
Some red and some white;
Daisies, their which fingers
Half clasped in prayer;
Dandelions, proud of
The gold of their hair;
Innocents, —children,
Guileless and frail,
Meek little faces
Upturned and pale;
Wildwood geraniums,
All in their best,
Languidly leaning,
In purple gauze dressed;—
All are assembled,
This sweet Sabbath day,
To hear what the priest
In his pulpit will say.

Look! What Indian pipes
On the green mosses lie!
Who has been smoking
Profanely so nigh?
Rebuked by the preacher,
The mischief is stopped;
But the sinners, in haste,
Have their little pipes dropped.
Let the wind, with the fragrance
Of fern and black birch,
Blow the smell of the smoking
Clean out of the church.
So much for the preacher;
The sermon comes next.

Shall we tell how he preached it
And what was his text?
Alas! Like too many
Grown-up folks who play
At worship in churches
Man-builded today,
We heard not the preacher
Expound or discuss;
But we looked at the people,
And they looked at us.

We saw all their dresses,
Their colors and shapes,
The trim of their bonnets,
The cut of their capes.
We heard the wind-organ,
The bee and the bird,
But of Jack in the Pulpit
We heard not a word.

Brumbaugh’s Standard Third Reader, 1899

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