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Nature Has A Thousand Choirs

Freeman E. Miller

Nature has a thousand choirs
  Singing in the sylvan shadows,
And the music of her lyres
  Echoes in the merry meadows;
Always glad with golden glee
Sounds her happy melody,
Swelling wild in fairy measure
With the songs of purest pleasure.

Where the dancing fountains play
  Winding warbles shake and shiver,
And soft carols rise alway
  From the ripples of the river;
Sweetest voices fondly call
From the fleecy waterfall,
And the joyful chimes are creeping
Where the lovely lake is sleeping.

Raptures echo in the wood,
  Where the pimpernel reposes;
Gladness fills the solitude
  Where the blushes kiss the roses;
Sunny beam and somber gloom
Utter hymns from bowers of bloom,
Where the vernal winds are crying
And the vocal birds are flying.

O’er the smiling scenes of earth
  Nature throws no sullen weather;
All her soul is full of mirth,
  Song and springtime walk together;
For the harps of happy days
Wake the woodlands with their lays,
And where lilies white are springing
Gentle melodies are ringing.

O, wild Nature, from thy soul
  Fill the human hearts with gladness,
Till their lives shall gladly troll
  Songs that banish all their sadness!
Bathe their breasts with songs of love
From the Edens found above,
Till their lips shall sing the story
Of their happiness and glory!
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Oklahoma and Other Poems | Charles Wells Moulton, 1895
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