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				Title:     Autumn In The Garden 
			    
Author: Henry Van Dyke [
More Titles by Van Dyke]		                
			    
When the frosty kiss of Autumn in the dark
 Makes its mark
 On the flowers, and the misty morning grieves
 Over fallen leaves;
 Then my olden garden, where the golden soil
 Through the toil
 Of a hundred years is mellow, rich, and deep,
 Whispers in its sleep.
 'Mid the crumpled beds of marigold and phlox,
 Where the box
 Borders with its glossy green the ancient walks,
 There's a voice that talks
 Of the human hopes that bloomed and withered here
 Year by year,--
 And the dreams that brightened all the labouring hours.
 Fading as the flowers.
 Yet the whispered story does not deepen grief;
 But relief
 For the loneliness of sorrow seems to flow
 From the Long-Ago,
 When I think of other lives that learned, like mine,
 To resign,
 And remember that the sadness of the fall
 Comes alike to all.
 What regrets, what longings for the lost were theirs I
 And what prayers
 For the silent strength that nerves us to endure
 Things we cannot cure!
 Pacing up and down the garden where they paced,
 I have traced
 All their well-worn paths of patience, till I find
 Comfort in my mind.
 Faint and far away their ancient griefs appear:
 Yet how near
 Is the tender voice, the careworn, kindly face,
 Of the human race!
 Let us walk together in the garden, dearest heart,--
 Not apart!
 They who know the sorrows other lives have known
 Never walk alone.
October, 1903.
[The end]
Henry Van Dyke's poem: Autumn In The Garden
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