Page:Myrtle and Myrrh.djvu/20

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Nor even the morning zephyr
That blows o'er den and bower.

Thou wouldst not be the virgin snow
Set free from yonder clouds,
Only to melt beneath the feet
Of surging human crowds."

"No! none of these," my Soul replied;
"I'll shiver ever thrall;
O let me rise, for I would be
The sky above them all."


THE PHILISTINE

The cricket to the corn-crake came one day,
Shivering, yet buzzing in his wanton way,
And said: "I'm slain
By hunger, brother, turn thou not from me;
'Tis winter, and I only beg of thee
A little grain."

The corn-crake grinned and said in tone sublime:
"Where wert thou hidden in the harvest time,
Thou dinning drone?
Why didst thou not come with us to the fields
To gather something for thy winter meals
Of what had grown?

"O, I was entertaining with my rhymes
The vineyards, and the fig trees, and the thymes
The summer long."
"No then," replied the corn-crake, "not a seed
Have I for such as thou; go home and feed
Upon thy Song."

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