Urge your swift horse
After the crying hounds in this fresh hour
Vanquish high hills stem perilous streams perforce
Where the glades ope give free wings to your course
And you will know the power
Of the brave chase and how of griefs the sorest,
A cure is in the forest.
Or stalk the deer:
The same red fires of dawn illume the hills,
The gladdest sounds are crowding on your ear,
There is a life in all the atmosphere
Your very nature fills
With the fresh hour, as up the hills aspiring,
You climb with limbs untiring.
It is a fair
And pleasant sight, to see the mountain stag,
With the long sweep of his swift walk, repair
To join his brothers; or the plethoric bear
Lying on some high crag,
With pinky eyes half closed, but broad head shaking,
As gadflies keep him waking.
And these you see,
And, seeing them, you travel to their death,
With a slow stealthy step from tree to tree
Noting the wind, however faint it be;
The hunter draws a breath
In times like these, which he will say repays him
For all the care that waylays him.
Page:Southern Life in Southern Literature.djvu/222
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204
SOUTHERN LIFE IN SOUTHERN LITERATURE