Never yet was a springtime, Late though lingered the snow, That the sap stirred not at the whisper Of the south wind, sweet and low; Never yet was a springtime When the buds forgot to blow. Ever the wings of the summer Are folded under the mould; Life, that has known no dying, Is Love’s, to have and to hold, Till, sudden, the burgeoning Easter! The song! the green and the gold!
Awakening
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Each day, when the glow of sunset Fades in the western sky, And the wee ones, tired of playing, Go tripping lightly by, I steal away from my husband, Asleep in his easy-chair, And watch from the open door-way Their faces fresh and fair. Alone in the dear old homestead That once was...
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Never yet was a springtime, Late though lingered the snow, That the sap stirred not at the whisper Of the south wind, sweet and low; Never yet was a springtime When the buds forgot to blow. Ever the wings of the summer Are folded under the mould; Life, that has known no dying, Is Love’...
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His fourscore years and five Are gone, like a tale that is told. The quick tears start, there ’s an ache at the heart, For we never thought him old. Straight as a mountain pine, With the mountain eagle’s eye, With the hand-clasp strong, and the unhushed song, Was it time for him to die?...