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THE LAST PINE.

Where the fallow-colored hill
Juts against a cloudy wreath —
Gray the sky, the ground beneath
White with shreds from winter's quill —
Holds a pine of giant girth
All alone a patience grim
In the ghastly cold, the dim
Sifted light that wraps the earth
Like a soldier strictly charged
Never from his watch to yield:
Long ago was hushed the field,
All his comrades long discharged;
Solid hangs the icy tear,
Numb his arms with creeping frost,
And his senses four are lost
In a bitter strife to bear:
Yet unmoved he keepeth post,
Dim of sight but list'ning still,
Lest across the lonely hill
Call the bugles of the host.
Once upon a silent day
Heaved the tree such breaths profound,
Air was carded into sound;
Thus the pine was heard to say:
"One by one,
Though they towered high and wide,
Sank my brothers by my side;
Fell away my friends of youth
Death on them had never ruth.
One by one
Dropped my warming arms of green,
Till I stand of branches lean;
Straight the woodpecker may shoot
From my crown to knotted root:
All is done!
"I am past.
Once I dwelt with fellows dear,
Once I felt the green sod near;
Year by year
In the choir of our wood
Crashed a singer where he stood,
And the boughs that rained forever,
Lowest first, then upward ever.