Poems (Scudder)/A Provincetown Summer

4532424Poems — A Provincetown SummerAntoinette Quinby Scudder

A PROVINCETOWN SUMMER
FOR M.A.R.

One summer I spent on old Cape Cod
In a town where the "Portygees"
Were at strife with the lean New England folk
For the spoil of the cold North seas.

I rented a room in a big white house—
How the artists loved to paint
The sulphur roses and hollyhocks
That grew in its garden quaint.

I would wake at dawn in the high white bed
And gaze up the narrow street
To the wee churchyard where the tall headstones
Stood orderly, grave and sweet

Though so few were straight and the most part leaned
To each other in friendly way
Like the sober greeting of Quaker dames
In their russet and gentle grey.

And all through the leaves of chestnut and elm
The sun made a cool green glow
As it shone through smaragd tinted water
Round the weedy piers below.

And then I'd dress and go hurrying down
To the rickety barn that we
Called "our studio." I was often late,
But the coffee kept hot for me.

We were always sketching a red-roofed pier
Where the seagulls whirled all day,
Or a boat that turned on its helpless side
Like an empty mussel lay.

Or a rusty can that the shrinking tide
Left glittering in our view
With such tints of copper, garnet and rose
That Titian would love it too.

—One day I went to the upland moor
And a thunder-shower came;
But I braved the wet for I yearned to paint
How the fireweed's rippling flame

Went scorching through heather dust-brown and dead
Till it quenched at last might be
In a small round pool that stared at the sky
Dead-blue as chalcedony.

Well, the pictures we toiled so hard to make—
They were crude affairs enough
With the paint laid on in "daring" strokes,
All ragged and thick and rough.

—But oh, for the fearless eyes of my youth
That were never afraid to see,
And oh, for the glamour of summer days
In an artists' colony.