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Lundy's
Lane and Other Poems
by
Duncan Campbell Scott
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FROST
MAGIC
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I
NOW,
in the moonrise, from a wintry sky,
The frost has come to charm with
elfin might
This quiet room; to draw with symbols bright
Faces and forms in fairest charactery
Upon the casement; all the thoughts that lie
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| Deep
hidden in my heart's core he would tell,
How the red shoots of fancy strike and swell,
How they are watered, what soil nourished by.
WITH
eerie power he piles his atomies,
Incrusted gems, star-glances overborne
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With
lids of sleep pulled from the moth's bright
eyes,
And forests of frail ferns, blanched and forlorn,
Where Oberon of unimagined size
Might in the silver silence wind his horn. |
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II
WITH
these alone he draws in magic lines,
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Faces
that people dreams, and chiefly one
Happy and brilliant as the northern sun,
And by its darling side there gleams and shines
One of God's children with the laughing signs
Of dimples, and glad accents, and sweet cries,
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| That
angels are and heaven's memories:
The wizard thus my soul's estate divines;
ALL
it holds dear he sets alone apart,
Etches the past in likeness of dim
groves
Silvered in quiet rime and with rare art, |
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In crystal
spoils and fairy treasure-troves,
He draws the picture of the happy heart,
By those who love it most, whom most it loves. |
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