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Yellow Warblers

Topics: classic

The first faint dawn was flushing up the skies     When, dreamland still bewildering mine eyes,     I looked out to the oak that, winter-long,     a winter wild with war and woe and wrong     Beyond my casement had been void of song.     And lo! with golden buds the twigs were set,     Live buds that warbled like a rivulet     Beneath a veil of willows. Then I knew     Those tiny voices, clear as drops of dew,     Those flying daffodils that fleck the blue,     Those sparkling visitants from myrtle isles,     Wee pilgrims of the sun, that measure miles     Innumerable over land and sea     With wings of shining inches. Flakes of glee,     They filled that dark old oak with jubilee,     Foretelling in delicious roundelays     Their dainty courtships on the dipping sprays,     How they should fashion nests, mate helping mate,     Of milkweed flax and fern-down delicate     To keep sky-tinted eggs inviolate.     Listening to those blithe notes, I slipped once more     From lyric dawn through dreamland's open door,     And there was God, Eternal Life that sings,     Eternal joy, brooding all mortal things,     A nest of stars, beneath untroubled wings.

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"The first faint dawn was flushing up the skies..."

"Yellow Warblers" is a quintessential example of Katharine Lee Bates'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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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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"Must I, who walk alone,     Come on it still,     ..."

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