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Spring.

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On, like a giant, stalketh the strong Wind,         Wrapping the clouds about him, close and dark,     Rifting Creation's soul, for rage is blind,--         No pity hath he for the Earth all stark,     Shivering beneath the loose and drifting snow,     A scanty shroud to hide the dead below.     Dead? There is life within the mother's breast--         So claspeth she her young ones to her heart;--     "The time will come--the time will come--rest! rest!         Let the mad greybeard to his North depart;     Earth shall arise and mock him in his grave--     Patience a little, let the dotard rave!"     The palsied boughs grew still--there came a pause,         And Nature's heart scarce beat for listening,     Gazing abroad from all the tempest-flaws,         With prayerful longing for the saviour Spring;     And when she heard Spring coming up the sky,     Earth rose and threw her shroud off joyfully.     Then she who once had wept like Niobe,         Beheld her children springing round her feet,     Raising young voices in the early day,         That never to her ear had seem'd so sweet;     And the soft murmur of a thousand rills     Proclaim'd how Spring had loosed them on the hills.     The bright Evangel came, girt round with mirth,         And garlanded with youth, and crown'd with flowers     "Awake! arise! ye sons of the new birth,         And move to the quick measure of the hours!     Summer is coming--go ye forth to meet her,     With sweetest hymeneal songs to greet her."     So there arose straightway a joyous train,         Gather'd by every nook and hedgerow shade,     That in its passage o'er the verdant plain,         'Still in the heart a thrilling music made--     Sweet pilgrims they of Love in youth's gay time,     Leading the year on to its golden prime.     The birds sang homage to her evermore;         And myriad wingd things, whose radiant dyes     Made sunshine beautiful, still hover'd o'er,         And bore her witness in the sunlit skies;     And rising from the tomb in glad amaze,     Came many a sainted flower to hymn her praise.     Thus from the streams, and rivers, from the sea,         From the stirr'd bosom of the mighty hills,     From every glade there rose continually         A blessing for her, till with joyous thrills     Earth's bosom heaved, and in man's heart a voice     Echoed the anthem--"Spring is come! Rejoice!"

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"On, like a giant, stalketh the strong Wind,..."

"Spring." is a quintessential example of Walter R. Cassels's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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