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				Title:     Light Between The Trees 
			    
Author: Henry Van Dyke [
More Titles by Van Dyke]		                
			    
Long, long, long the trail
 Through the brooding forest-gloom,
 Down the shadowy, lonely vale
 Into silence, like a room
 Where the light of life has fled,
 And the jealous curtains close
 Round the passionless repose
 Of the silent dead.
 Plod, plod, plod away,
 Step by step in mouldering moss;
 Thick branches bar the day
 Over languid streams that cross
 Softly, slowly, with a sound
 Like a smothered weeping,
 In their aimless creeping
 Through enchanted ground.
 "Yield, yield, yield thy quest,"
 Whispers through the woodland deep;
 "Come to me and be at rest;
 I am slumber, I am sleep."
 Then the weary feet would fail,
 But the never-daunted will
 Urges "Forward, forward still!
 Press along the trail!"
 Breast, breast, breast the slope
 See, the path is growing steep.
 Hark! a little song of hope
 Where the stream begins to leap.
 Though the forest, far and wide,
 Still shuts out the bending blue,
 We shall finally win through,
 Cross the long divide.
 On, on, on we tramp!
 Will the journey never end?
 Over yonder lies the camp;
 Welcome waits us there, my friend.
 Can we reach it ere the night?
 Upward, upward, never fear!
 Look, the summit must be near;
 See the line of light!
 Red, red, red the shine
 Of the splendour in the west,
 Glowing through the ranks of pine,
 Clear along the mountain-crest!
 Long, long, long the trail
 Out of sorrow's lonely vale;
 But at last the traveller sees
 Light between the trees!
March, 1904.
[The end]
Henry Van Dyke's poem: Light Between The Trees
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