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Collected Poems: With Autobiographical and Critical Fragments

By Frederic W. H. Myers: Edited by his Wife Eveleen Myers

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SIMMENTHAL
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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206

SIMMENTHAL

Far off the old snows evernew
With silver edges cleft the blue
Aloft, alone, divine;
The sunny meadows silent slept,
Silence the sombre armies kept,
The vanguard of the pine.
In that thin air the birds are still,
No ringdove murmurs on the hill
Nor mating cushat calls;
But gay cicalas singing sprang,
And waters from the forest sang
The song of waterfalls.
O Fate! a few enchanted hours
Beneath the firs, among the flowers,
High on the lawn we lay,
Then turned again, contented well,
While bright about us flamed and fell
The rapture of the day.
And softly with a guileless awe
Beyond the purple lake she saw
The embattled summits glow;

207

She saw the glories melt in one,
The round moon rise, while yet the sun
Was rosy on the snow.
Then like a newly singing bird
The child's soul in her bosom stirred;
I know not what she sung:—
Because the soft wind caught her hair,
Because the golden moon was fair,
Because her heart was young.
I would her sweet soul ever may
Look thus from those glad eyes and grey,
Unfearing, undefiled:
I love her; when her face I see,
Her simple presence wakes in me
The imperishable child.