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“Showing, dear Mother, tho' the tale is told,
It carries only vague significance,

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Save thro' experience and sympathy.
At easy ranges aye these triflers flit
Round bush and tree; and, haunting in the spring
Our upper lands, weave unregarded nests,
And utter little songs from hour to hour.
“On yestereven, ere the sun went down,
I scaled the crags, for ever sacred, where
Pallas Athena's voice foretold my doom.
I lay and meditated feats unwrought
By daring men of parents yet unborn:
As one, while musing, sees a city rise,
Whose paven streets slope down to massive quays;
The rock, meanwhile, whence hewn the stone must come,
For temples, towers, and palaces superb,
Untouched as yet of chisel, pick, or bar.
A city airy as a morning dream,
That grows to shape and harbours multitudes!
While thus I saw this phantom populace,
Urging alway in ceaseless ebb and flow,

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I heard a haughty pair of eagles croon;
In trouble for a nestling that had fallen,
Breaking its unfledged winglet on the rock,
And marked for death; as, thralled with damaged limb;
Tho' haply it might forage and escape,
Escape were hopeless, should perchance it catch
A shepherd's eye; as shepherds ever kill,
Or maim with cruel torture creatures rare.
“This danger lit ungovernable ire
In those grim parents: loudly then cried one: