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Lake
Lyrics and Other Poems
by
William Wilfred Campbell
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THE
WINTER LAKES
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OUT
in a world of death far to the northward lying,
Under the sun and the moon,
under the dusk and the day;
Under the glimmer of stars and the purple of sunsets
dying,
Wan and waste and white,
stretch the great lakes away.
Never a bud of spring, never a laugh of summer,
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Never
a dream of love, never a song of bird;
But only the silence and white, the shores that
grow chiller and dumber,
Wherever the ice winds sob,
and the griefs of winter are heard.
Crags that are black and wet out of the gray
lake looming,
Under the sunset’s
flush and the pallid, faint glimmer of dawn;
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Shadowy,
ghost-like shores, where midnight surfs are booming
Thunders of wintry woe over
the spaces wan.
Lands that loom like spectres, whited regions
of winter,
Wastes of desolate woods,
deserts of water and shore;
A world of winter and death, within these regions
who enter,
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| Lost
to summer and life, go to return no more.
Moons that glimmer above, waters that lie white
under,
Miles and miles of lake
far out under the night;
Foaming crests of waves, surfs that shoreward
thunder,
Shadowy shapes that flee,
haunting the spaces white.
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Lonely hidden bays, moon-lit, ice-rimmed, winding,
Fringed by forests and crags,
haunted by shadowy shores;
Hushed from the outward strife, where the mighty
surf is grinding
Death and hate on the rocks,
as sandward and landward it roars. |
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