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James Russell Lowell - PhoebeJames Russell Lowell - Phoebe
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Ere pales in Heaven the morning star,   A bird, the loneliest of its kind, Hears Dawn`s faint footfall from afar   While all its mates are dumb and blind. It is a wee sad-colored thing,   As shy and secret as a maid, That, ere in choir the robins sing,   Pipes its own name like one afraid. It seems pain-prompted to repeat   The story of some ancient ill, But _Phoebe! Phoebe!_ sadly sweet   Is all it says, and then is still. It calls and listens. Earth and sky,   Hushed by the pathos of its fate, Listen: no whisper of reply   Comes from its doom-dissevered mate. _Phoebe!_ it calls and calls again,   And Ovid, could he but have heard, Had hung a legendary pain   About the memory of the bird; A pain articulate so long,   In penance of some mouldered crime Whose ghost still flies the Furies` thong   Down the waste solitudes of time. Waif of the young World`s wonder-hour,   When gods found mortal maidens fair, And will malign was joined with power   Love`s kindly laws to overbear, Like Progne, did it feel the stress   And coil of the prevailing words Close round its being, and compress   Man`s ampler nature to a bird`s? One only memory left of all   The motley crowd of vanished scenes, Hers, and vain impulse to recall   By repetition what it means. _Phoebe!_ is all it has to say   In plaintive cadence o`er and o`er, Like children that have lost their way,   And know their names, but nothing more. Is it a type, since Nature`s Lyre   Vibrates to every note in man, Of that insatiable desire,   Meant to be so since life began? I, in strange lands at gray of dawn,   Wakeful, have heard that fruitless plaint Through Memory`s chambers deep withdrawn   Renew its iterations faint. So nigh! yet from remotest years   It summons back its magic, rife With longings unappeased, and tears   Drawn from the very source of life.
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