He sang one song and died—no more but that: A single song and carelessly complete. He would not bind and thresh his chance-grown wheat, Nor bring his wild fruit to the common vat, To store the acid rinsings, thin and flat, Squeezed from the press or trodden under feet. A few slow beads, blood-red and honey-sweet, Oozed from the grape, which burst and spilled its fat. But Time, who soonest drops the heaviest things That weight his pack, will carry diamonds long. So through the poets’ orchestra, which weaves One music from a thousand stops and strings, Pierces the note of that immortal song: “High over all the lonely bugle grieves.” 1 Note 1. See Vol. VIII. [back]
The Singer of One Song
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He sang one song and died—no more but that: A single song and carelessly complete. He would not bind and thresh his chance-grown wheat, Nor bring his wild fruit to the common vat, To store the acid rinsings, thin and flat, Squeezed from the press or trodden under feet. A few slow beads, blood-...
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He sang one song and died—no more but that: A single song and carelessly complete. He would not bind and thresh his chance-grown wheat, Nor bring his wild fruit to the common vat, To store the acid rinsings, thin and flat, Squeezed from the press or trodden under feet. A few slow beads, blood-...
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The wilderness a secret keeps Upon whose guess I go: Eye hath not seen, ear hath not heard; And yet I know, I know, Some day the viewless latch will lift, The door of air swing wide To one lost chamber of the wood Where those shy mysteries hide,— One yet unfound, receding depth, From...
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Mimi, do you remember— Don’t get behind your fan— That morning in September On the cliffs of Grand Manan, Where to the shock of Fundy The topmost harebells sway (Campanula rotundi- folia: cf. Gray)? On the pastures high and level, That overlook the sea, Where I wondered what the devil...
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Thine old-world eyes—each one a violet Big as the baby rose that is thy mouth— Set me a-dreaming. Have our eyes not met In childhood—in a garden of the South? Thy lips are trembling with a song of France, My cousin, and thine eyes are dimly sweet; ’Wildered with reading in an old romance...