Public Domain Poetry And Stories - To a River in the South by Henry John Newbolt, Sir
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To a River in the South

    By Henry John Newbolt, Sir



        Call me no more, O gentle stream,
        To wander through thy sunny dream,
        No more to lean at twilight cool
        Above thy weir and glimmering pool.

        Surely I know thy hoary dawns,
        The silver crisp on all thy lawns,
        The softly swirling undersong
        That rocks thy reeds the winter long.

        Surely I know the joys that ring
        Through the green deeps of leafy spring;
        I know the elfin cups and domes
        That are their small and secret homes.

        Yet is the light for ever lost
        That daily once thy meadows crossed,
        The voice no more by thee is heard
        That matched the song of stream and bird.

        Call me no more!--thy waters roll
        Here, in the world that is my soul,
        And here, though Earth be drowned in night,
        Old love shall dwell with old delight.



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