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Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - Children. (Birds Of Passage. Flight The First)Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - Children. (Birds Of Passage. Flight The First)
Work rating: Medium


Come to me, O ye children!   For I hear you at your play, And the questions that perplexed me   Have vanished quite away. Ye open the eastern windows,   That look towards the sun, Where thoughts are singing swallows   And the brooks of morning run. In your hearts are the birds and the sunshine,   In your thoughts the brooklet`s flow, But in mine is the wind of Autumn   And the first fall of the snow. Ah! what would the world be to us   If the children were no more? We should dread the desert behind us   Worse than the dark before. What the leaves are to the forest,   With light and air for food, Ere their sweet and tender juices   Have been hardened into wood,-- That to the world are children;   Through them it feels the glow Of a brighter and sunnier climate   Than reaches the trunks below. Come to me, O ye children!   And whisper in my ear What the birds and the winds are singing   In your sunny atmosphere. For what are all our contrivings,   And the wisdom of our books, When compared with your caresses,   And the gladness of your looks? Ye are better than all the ballads   That ever were sung or said; For ye are living poems,   And all the rest are dead.
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