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				Title:     The Hills 
			    
Author: George MacDonald [
More Titles by MacDonald]		                
			    
Behind my father's house there lies
 A little grassy brae,
Whose face my childhood's busy feet
 Ran often up in play,
Whence on the chimneys I looked down
 In wonderment alway.
Around the house, where'er I turned,
 Great hills closed up the view;
The town 'midst their converging roots
 Was clasped by rivers two;
From one hill to another sprang
 The sky's great arch of blue.
Oh! how I loved to climb their sides,
 And in the heather lie;
The bridle on my arm did hold
 The pony feeding by;
Beneath, the silvery streams; above,
 The white clouds in the sky.
And now, in wandering about,
 Whene'er I see a hill,
A childish feeling of delight
 Springs in my bosom still;
And longings for the high unknown
 Follow and flow and fill.
For I am always climbing hills,
 And ever passing on,
Hoping on some high mountain peak
 To find my Father's throne;
For hitherto I've only found
 His footsteps in the stone.
And in my wanderings I have met
 A spirit child like me,
Who laid a trusting hand in mine,
 So fearlessly and free,
That so together we have gone,
 Climbing continually.
Upfolded in a spirit bud,
 The child appeared in space,
Not born amid the silent hills,
 But in a busy place;
And yet in every hill we see
 A strange, familiar face.
For they are near our common home;
 And so in trust we go,
Climbing and climbing on and on,
 Whither we do not know;
Not waiting for the mournful dark,
 But for the dawning slow.
Clasp my hand closer yet, my child,--
 A long way we have come!
Clasp my hand closer yet, my child,--
 For we have far to roam,
Climbing and climbing, till we reach
 Our Heavenly Father's home.
[The end]
George MacDonald's poem: Hills
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