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A continuing selection of classic and contemporary poems.

Fair Eve

John Freeman

Fair Eve, as fair and still
As fairest thought, climbs the high sheltering hill;
As still and fair
As the white cloud asleep in the deep air.

As cool, as fair and cool,
As starlight swimming in a lonely pool;
Subtle and mild
As through her eyes the soul looks of a child.

A linnet sings and sings,
A shrill swift cleaves the air with blackest wings;
White twinkletails
Run frankly in their meadow as day fails.

On such a night, a night
That seems but the full sleep of tired light,
I look and wait
For what I know not, looking long and late.

Is it for a dream I look,
A vision from the Tree of Heaven shook,
As sweetness shaken
From the fresh limes on lonely ways forsaken?

A dream of one, maybe,
Who comes like sudden wind from oversea?
Or most loved swallow
Whom all fair days and golden musics follow?—

More sudden yet, more strange
Than magic airs on magic hills that range:—
Of one who’ll steep
The soul in soft forgetfulness ere it sleep.

Yes, down the hillside road,
Where Eve’s unhasty feet so gently trod,
Follow His feet
Whose leaf-like echoes make even spring more sweet.
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Poems New and Old | Selwyn and Blount, Ltd., 1920
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