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The
Dread Voyage Poems
by
William Wilfred Campbell
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AN
OCTOBER EVENING
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THE
woods are haggard and lonely,
The skies are hooded for snow,
The moon is cold in Heaven,
And the grasses are sere below.
The bearded swamps are breathing
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5 |
A mist
from meres afar,
And grimly the Great Bear circles
Under the pale Pole Star.
There is never a voice in Heaven,
Nor ever a sound on earth,
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10 |
Where
the spectres of winter are rising
Over the night’s wan girth.
There is slumber and death in the silence,
There is hate in the winds so keen;
And the flash of the north’s great sword-blade
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15 |
| Circles
its cruel sheen.
The world grows agèd and wintry,
Love’s face peakèd and white;
And death is kind to the tired ones
Who sleep in the north to-night.
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