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Nor Hawthorne's manse, with ancient moss As this calm haven, where the leaves are

bespread,

Nor Irving's hollow, is with rest so rife

shed

Round Indian summers of a golden life.

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Sir Lewis Morris

Calling at its own hour

On folded leaf and flower,

Calling the lamb, the lark, the bee,

On that hillside I know which scans the vale, Calling the crocus and anemone,

Beneath the thick yews' shade,

For shelter when the rains and winds pre

vail.

It cannot be the eye

Is blinded when we die,

So that we know no more at all

The dawns increase, the evenings fall ; Shut up within a mouldering chest of wood Asleep, and careless of our children's good.

Shall I not feel the spring,

The yearly resurrection of the earth,
Stir thro' each sleeping thing

With the fair throbbings and alarms of birth,

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Or should my children's tread

And in a marble urn

Through Sabbath twilights, when the hymns My ashes rest by my beloved dead,

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Oh, lonely loveless voice, what dost thou here

In the deep silence of the fading year?

Thus do I read answer of thy song: "I sang when winds blew chilly all day long;

I

I sang because hope came and joy was near, sang a little while, I made good cheer; In summer's cloudless day

My music died away ;

But now the hope and glory of the year Are dead and gone, a little while I sing Songs of regret for days no longer here, And touch'd with presage of the far-off Spring."

Is this the meaning of thy note, fair bird?
Or do we read into thy simple brain
Echoes of thoughts which human hearts
have stirr'd,

High-soaring joy and melancholy pain?
Nay, nay, that lingering note

Belated from thy throat

66

Regret," is what it sings, "regret, regret! The dear days pass, but are not wholly

gone.

In praise of those I let my song go on; "T is sweeter to remember than forget."

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