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				Title:     Songs Of The Summer Days 
			    
Author: George MacDonald [
More Titles by MacDonald]		                
			    
I.
 A glory on the chamber wall!
 A glory in the brain!
 Triumphant floods of glory fall
 On heath, and wold, and plain.
 Earth lieth still in hopeless bliss;
 She has, and seeks no more;
 Forgets that days come after this,
 Forgets the days before.
 Each ripple waves a flickering fire
 Of gladness, as it runs;
 They laugh and flash, and leap and spire,
 And toss ten thousand suns.
 But hark! low, in the world within,
 One sad aeolian tone:
 "Ah! shall we ever, ever win
 A summer of our own?"
 II.
 A morn of winds and swaying trees--
 Earth's jubilance rushing out!
 The birds are fighting with the breeze;
 The waters heave about.
 White clouds are swept across the sky,
 Their shadows o'er the graves;
 Purpling the green, they float and fly
 Athwart the sunny waves.
 The long grass--an earth-rooted sea--
 Mimics the watery strife.
 To boat or horse? Wild motion we
 Shall find harmonious life.
 But whither? Roll and sweep and bend
 Suffice for Nature's part;
 But motion to an endless end
 Is needful for our heart.
 III.
 The morn awakes like brooding dove,
 With outspread wings of gray;
 Her feathery clouds close in above,
 And roof a sober day.
 No motion in the deeps of air!
 No trembling in the leaves!
 A still contentment everywhere,
 That neither laughs nor grieves!
 A film of sheeted silver gray
 Shuts in the ocean's hue;
 White-winged feluccas cleave their way
 In paths of gorgeous blue.
 Dream on, dream on, O dreamy day,
 Thy very clouds are dreams!
 Yon child is dreaming far away--
 He is not where he seems.
 IV.
 The lark is up, his faith is strong,
 He mounts the morning air;
 Lone voice of all the creature throng,
 He sings the morning prayer.
 Slow clouds from north and south appear,
 Black-based, with shining slope;
 In sullen forms their might they rear,
 And climb the vaulted cope.
 A lightning flash, a thunder boom!--
 Nor sun nor clouds are there;
 A single, all-pervading gloom
 Hangs in the heavy air.
 A weeping, wasting afternoon
 Weighs down the aspiring corn;
 Amber and red, the sunset soon
 Leads back to golden morn.
[The end]
George MacDonald's poem: Songs Of The Summer Days
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