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Poems of Paul Hamilton Hayne

Complete edition with numerous illustrations

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BY A GRAVE.

IN SPRING.

Ah, mother! canst thou feel her? ... spring has come!
Birds sing, brooks murmur, woods no more are dumb;

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And for each grief that vexed thine earthly hour,
Nature has kissed thy grave! and lo! .. a flower.
Here wails no nightingale against her thorn,
But like the incarnate soul of May-flushed morn,
The mocking-bird above thy splendor sings,
With rapturous throat, and upraised quivering wings;
Half drowsed between brief glooms and mellowed gleams,
The sun smiles gently, like a god in dreams;
His sacred light across thy place of rest,
Steals with the softness of a hand that blessed!
Thro' magic ministers of spring-tide grace,
Thy grave transfigured lifts a radiant face,
O'er which elusive golden shadows run,
A waft of wind-wrought dimples in the sun;
Ah! if thy soul, that loved all beauty here,
May yet look earthward from her holier sphere,
'Twill joy to mark, from even those heights august,
In what a mantle Nature wraps thy dust.
And still the brown bird rears of his poet-head,
And pours his matchless music o'er the dead,
'Till touched and wakened by the marvellous flow,
I seem to hear a thrilled heart throb below!