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A Bridal Measure

Paul Laurence Dunbar

Come, essay a sprightly measure,
Tuned to some light song of pleasure.
  Maidens, let your brows be crowned
  As we foot this merry round.

From the ground a voice is singing,
From the sod a soul is springing.
  Who shall say ‘t is but a clod
  Quick’ning upward toward its God?

Who shall say it? Who may know it,
That the clod is not a poet
  Waiting but a gleam to waken
  In a spirit music-shaken?

Phyllis, Phyllis, why be waiting?
In the woods the birds are mating.
  From the tree beside the wall,
  Hear the am’rous robin call.

Listen to yon thrush’s trilling;
Phyllis, Phyllis, are you willing,
  When love speaks from cave and tree,
  Only we should silent be?

When the year, itself renewing,
All the world with flowers is strewing,
  Then through Youth’s Arcadian land,
  Love and song go hand in hand.

Come, unfold your vocal treasure,
Sing with me a nuptial measure,—
  Let this springtime gambol be
  Bridal dance for you and me.
Online text © 1998-2009 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From The Complete Poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar | Dodd, Mead And Company, 1922
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