Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The Worlds Best Poetry. Volume VI. Fancy. 1904. | | | | Poems of Sentiment: VI. Labor and Rest | | Rest | | Margaret L. Woods (18561945) |
| | | TO spend the long warm days | |
| Silent beside the silent-stealing streams, | |
| To see, not gaze, | |
| To hear, not listen, thoughts exchanged for dreams: | |
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| See clouds that slowly pass | 5 |
| Trailing their shadows oer the far faint down, | |
| And ripening grass, | |
| While yet the meadows wear their starry crown: | |
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| To hear the breezes sigh | |
| Cool in the silver leaves like falling rain, | 10 |
| Pause and go by, | |
| Tired wanderers oer the solitary plain: | |
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| See far from all affright | |
| Shy river creatures play hour after hour, | |
| And night by night | 15 |
| Low in the West the white moons folding flower. | |
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| Thus lost to human things, | |
| To blend at last with Nature and to hear | |
| What songs she sings | |
| Low to herself when there is no one near. | 20 | | | |
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