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A SPRINGTIME.

One knows the spring is coming: There are birds; the fields are green; There is balm in the sunlight and moonlight, And dew in the twilights between. But over there is a silence, A rapture great and dumb, That day when the doubt is ended, And at last the spring is come. Behold the wonder, O silence! Strange as if wrought in a night,–– The waited and lingering glory, The world-old, fresh delight! O blossoms that hang like winter, Drifted upon the trees, O birds that sing in the blossoms, O blossom-haunting bees,–– O green, green leaves on the branches, O shadowy dark below, 107 O cool of the aisles of orchards, Woods that the wild flowers know,–– O air of gold and perfume, Wind, breathing sweet and sun, O sky of perfect azure–– Day, Heaven and Earth in one!–– Let me draw near thy secret, And in thy deep heart see How fared, in doubt and dreaming, The spring that is come in me. For my soul is held in silence, A rapture, great and dumb,–– For the mystery that lingered, The glory that is come!

1861.


108

IN EARLIEST SPRING.

Tossing his mane of snows in wildest eddies and tangles, Lion-like, March cometh in, hoarse, with tempestuous breath, Through all the moaning chimneys, and thwart all the hollows and angles Round the shuddering house, threating of winter and death. But in my heart I feel the life of the wood and the meadow Thrilling the pulses that own kindred with fibres that lift Bud and blade to the sunward, within the inscrutable shadow, Deep in the oak’s chill core, under the gathering drift. Nay, to earth’s life in mine some prescience, or dream, or desire (How shall I name it aright?) comes for a moment and goes,–– 109 Rapture of life ineffable, perfect,––as if in the brier, Leafless there by my door, trembled a sense of the rose.

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