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				Title:     Songs Of The Spring Days 
			    
Author: George MacDonald [
More Titles by MacDonald]		                
			    
I.
 A gentle wind, of western birth
 On some far summer sea,
 Wakes daisies in the wintry earth,
 Wakes hopes in wintry me.
 The sun is low; the paths are wet,
 And dance with frolic hail;
 The trees--their spring-time is not yet--
 Swing sighing in the gale.
 Young gleams of sunshine peep and play;
 Clouds shoulder in between;
 I scarce believe one coming day
 The earth will all be green.
 The north wind blows, and blasts, and raves,
 And flaps his snowy wing:
 Back! toss thy bergs on arctic waves;
 Thou canst not bar our spring.
 II.
 Up comes the primrose, wondering;
 The snowdrop droopeth by;
 The holy spirit of the spring
 Is working silently.
 Soft-breathing breezes woo and wile
 The later children out;
 O'er woods and farms a sunny smile
 Is flickering about.
 The earth was cold, hard-hearted, dull;
 To death almost she slept:
 Over her, heaven grew beautiful,
 And forth her beauty crept.
 Showers yet must fall, and waters grow
 Dark-wan with furrowing blast;
 But suns will shine, and soft winds blow,
 Till the year flowers at last.
 III.
 The sky is smiling over me,
 Hath smiled away the frost;
 White daisies star the sky-like lea,
 With buds the wood's embossed.
 Troops of wild flowers gaze at the sky
 Up through the latticed boughs;
 Till comes the green cloud by and by,
 It is not time to house.
 Yours is the day, sweet bird--sing on;
 The winter is forgot;
 Like an ill dream 'tis over and gone:
 Pain that is past, is not.
 Joy that was past is yet the same:
 If care the summer brings,
 'Twill only be another name
 For love that broods, not sings.
 IV.
 Blow on me, wind, from west and south;
 Sweet summer-spirit, blow!
 Come like a kiss from dear child's mouth,
 Who knows not what I know.
 The earth's perfection dawneth soon;
 Ours lingereth alway;
 We have a morning, not a noon;
 Spring, but no summer gay.
 Rose-blotted eve, gold-branded morn
 Crown soon the swift year's life:
 In us a higher hope is born,
 And claims a longer strife.
 Will heaven be an eternal spring
 With summer at the door?
 Or shall we one day tell its king
 That we desire no more?
[The end]
George MacDonald's poem: Songs Of The Spring Days
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