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				Title:     Hide And Seek 
			    
Author: Henry Van Dyke [
More Titles by Van Dyke]		                
			    
I
 All the trees are sleeping, all the winds are still,
 All the fleecy flocks of cloud, gone beyond the hill;
 Through the noon-day silence, down the woods of June,
 Hark, a little hunter's voice, running with a tune.
 "Hide and seek!
 When I speak,
 You must answer me:
 Call again,
 Merry men,
 Coo-ee, coo-ee, coo-ee!"
 Now I hear his footsteps rustling in the grass:
 Hidden in my leafy nook, shall I let him pass?
 Just a low, soft whistle,--quick the hunter turns,
 Leaps upon me laughing loud, rolls me in the ferns.
 "Hold him fast,
 Caught at last!
 Now you're it, you see.
 Hide your eye,
 Till I cry,
 Coo-ee, coo-ee, coo-ee!"
II
 Long ago he left me, long and long ago;
 Now I wander thro' the world, seeking high and low.
 Hidden safe and happy, in some pleasant place,--
 If I could but hear his voice, soon I'd see his face!
 Far away,
 Many a day,
 Where can Barney be?
 Answer, dear,
 Don't you hear?
 Coo-ee, coo-ee, coo-ee!
 Birds that every spring-time sung him full of joy,
 Flowers he loved to pick for me, mind me of my boy.
 Somewhere he is waiting till my steps come nigh;
 Love may hide itself awhile, but love can never die.
 Heart, be glad,
 The little lad
 Will call again to thee:
 "Father dear,
 Heaven is here,
 Coo-ee, coo-ee, coo-ee!"
1898.
[The end]
Henry Van Dyke's poem: Hide And Seek
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