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<h2> After Many Years </h2>
<p>
The song that once I dreamed about,<br/>
The tender, touching thing,<br/>
As radiant as the rose without—<br/>
The love of wind and wing—<br/>
The perfect verses, to the tune<br/>
Of woodland music set,<br/>
As beautiful as afternoon,<br/>
Remain unwritten yet.<br/>
<br/>
It is too late to write them now—<br/>
The ancient fire is cold;<br/>
No ardent lights illume the brow,<br/>
As in the days of old.<br/>
I cannot dream the dream again;<br/>
But when the happy birds<br/>
Are singing in the sunny rain,<br/>
I think I hear its words.<br/>
<br/>
I think I hear the echo still<br/>
Of long-forgotten tones,<br/>
When evening winds are on the hill<br/>
And sunset fires the cones;<br/>
But only in the hours supreme,<br/>
With songs of land and sea,<br/>
The lyrics of the leaf and stream,<br/>
This echo comes to me.<br/>
<br/>
No longer doth the earth reveal<br/>
Her gracious green and gold;<br/>
I sit where youth was once, and feel<br/>
That I am growing old.<br/>
The lustre from the face of things<br/>
Is wearing all away;<br/>
Like one who halts with tired wings,<br/>
I rest and muse to-day.<br/>
<br/>
There is a river in the range<br/>
I love to think about;<br/>
Perhaps the searching feet of change<br/>
Have never found it out.<br/>
Ah! oftentimes I used to look<br/>
Upon its banks, and long<br/>
To steal the beauty of that brook<br/>
And put it in a song.<br/>
<br/>
I wonder if the slopes of moss,<br/>
In dreams so dear to me—<br/>
The falls of flower, and flower-like floss—<br/>
Are as they used to be!<br/>
I wonder if the waterfalls,<br/>
The singers far and fair,<br/>
That gleamed between the wet, green walls,<br/>
Are still the marvels there!<br/>
<br/>
Ah! let me hope that in that place<br/>
The old familiar things<br/>
To which I turn a wistful face<br/>
Have never taken wings.<br/>
Let me retain the fancy still<br/>
That, past the lordly range,<br/>
There always shines, in folds of hill,<br/>
One spot secure from change!<br/>
<br/>
I trust that yet the tender screen<br/>
That shades a certain nook,<br/>
Remains, with all its gold and green,<br/>
The glory of the brook.<br/>
It hides a secret to the birds<br/>
And waters only known:<br/>
The letters of two lovely words—<br/>
A poem on a stone.<br/>
<br/>
Perhaps the lady of the past<br/>
Upon these lines may light,<br/>
The purest verses, and the last<br/>
That I may ever write.<br/>
She need not fear a word of blame—<br/>
Her tale the flowers keep—<br/>
The wind that heard me breathe her name<br/>
Has been for years asleep.<br/>
<br/>
But in the night, and when the rain<br/>
The troubled torrent fills,<br/>
I often think I see again<br/>
The river in the hills;<br/>
And when the day is very near,<br/>
And birds are on the wing,<br/>
My spirit fancies it can hear<br/>
The song I cannot sing.<br/></p>
<p>[End of Songs from the Mountains.]</p>
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