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Edgar Allan Poe - To The LakeEdgar Allan Poe - To The Lake
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In spring of youth it was my lot       To haunt of the wide world a spot       The which I could not love the less-       So lovely was the loneliness       Of a wild lake, with black rock bound,       And the tall pines that towered around.       But when the Night had thrown her pall       Upon that spot, as upon all,       And the mystic wind went by       Murmuring in melody-       Then- ah then I would awake       To the terror of the lone lake.       Yet that terror was not fright,       But a tremulous delight-       A feeling not the jewelled mine       Could teach or bribe me to define-       Nor Love- although the Love were thine.       Death was in that poisonous wave,       And in its gulf a fitting grave       For him who thence could solace bring       To his lone imagining-       Whose solitary soul could make       An Eden of that dim lake.
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