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| I love the stillness of the wood: |
| I love the music of the rill: |
| I love to couch in pensive mood |
| Upon some silent hill. |
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5 | Scarce heard, beneath you arching trees, |
| The silver-crested ripples pass; |
| And, like a mimic brook, the breeze |
| Whispers among the grass. |
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| Here from the world I win release, |
10 | Nor scorn of men, nor footstep rude, |
| Break in to mar the holy peace |
| Of this great solitude. |
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| Here may the silent tears I weep |
| Lull the vexed spirit into rest, |
15 | As infants sob themselves to sleep |
| Upon a mother's breast. |
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| But when the bitter hour is gone, |
| And the keen throbbing pangs are still, |
| Oh, sweetest then to couch alone |
20 | Upon some silent hill! |
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| To live in joys that once have been, |
| To put the cold world out of sight, |
| And deck life's drear and barren scene |
| With hues of rainbow-light. |
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25 | For what to man the gift of breath, |
| If sorrow be his lot below; |
| If all the day that ends in death |
| Be dark with clouds of woe? |
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| Shall the poor transport of an hour |
30 | Repay long years of sore distress — |
| The fragrance of a lonely flower |
| Make glad the wilderness? |
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| Ye golden hours of Life's young spring, |
| Of innocence, of love and truth! |
35 | Bright, beyond all imagining, |
| Thou fairy-dream of youth! |
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| I'd give all wealth that years have piled, |
| The slow result of Life's decay, |
| To be once more a little child |
40 | For one bright summer-day. |
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| March 16, 1853.
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