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the comrades with outstretched hand-- But did you ever stand alone In a black, forsaken land? Then the wonderful things that God can do One comes to understand: How He turns the desert dust to a dream, And the lonely wind to a friend, And makes a bright beginning Of what had seemed the end: 'Twas in such an hour God placed in mine The moonbeam hand of a friend. "I THOUGHT, BEFORE MY SUNLIT TWENTIETH YEAR" I thought, before my sunlit twentieth year, That I knew Love, and Death that goes with it; And my young broken heart in little songs, Dew-like, I poured, and waited for my end Wildly--and waited--being then nineteen. I walked a little longer on my way, Alive, 'gainst expectation and desire, And, being then past twenty, I beheld The face of all the faces of the world Dewily opening on its stem for me. Ah! so it seemed, and, each succeeding year, Thus hath some woman blossom of the divine Flowered in my path, and made a frail delay In my true journey--to my home in thee. October 27, 1911. II TO A BIRD AT DAWN O bird that somewhere yonder sings, In the dim hour 'twixt dreams and dawn, Lone in the hush of sleeping things, In some sky sanctuary withdrawn; Your perfect song is too like pain, And will not let me sleep again. I think you must be more than bird, A little creature of soft wings, Not yours this deep and thrilling word-- Some morning planet 'tis that sings; Surely from no small feathered throat Wells that august, eternal note. As some old language of the dead, In one resounding syllable, Says Rome and Greece and all is said-- A simple word a child may spell; So in your liquid note impearled Sings the long epic of the world. Unfathomed sweetness of your song, With ancient anguish at its core, What womb of elemental wrong, With shudder unimagined, bore Peace so divine--what hell hath trod This voice that softly talks with God! All silence in one silver flower Of speech that speaks not, save as speaks The moon in heaven, yet hath power To tell the soul the thing it seeks. And pack, as by some wizard's art, The whole within the finite part. To you, sweet bird, one well might feign-- With such authority you sing So clear, yet so profound, a strain Into the simple ear of spring-- Some secret understanding given Of the hid purposes of Heaven. And all my life until this day, And all my life until I die, All joy and sorro
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