Page:Poems PiattVol2.djvu/162

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TO A DEAD BIRD, FOUND IN THE WOODS AT EVENING.
Bird of the forest, beautiful and dead!
While in the twilight here I look on thee,
Strange fancies, of the wild life that has fled,
Dimly and sadly gather over me,
Until, above thy calm and silent sleep,
I can but bow my aching head and weep.

Alas, that when the Spring-time's here to wake
The flowers and music of thy woodland halls,
Thou whose glad voice so sweet a strain could make
In concert with the winds and water-falls,
In cold and hushed oblivion shouldst lie—
While things that suffer ask, in vain, to die!

But, wast thou purely blest¥ Ah, who can tell
But birds may have their sorrows? It may be
That boundless love in thy small breast did dwell
For some bright, wingéd thing—that flew from thee

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