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By Jean Francois DucisHenry Wadsworth Longfellow

By Jean Francois Ducis

Thou brooklet, all unknown to song,

Hid in the covert of the wood!

Ah, yes, like thee I fear the throng,

Like thee I love the solitude.

 

O brooklet, let my sorrows past

Lie all forgotten in their graves,

Till in my thoughts remain at last

Only thy peace, thy flowers, thy waves.

 

The lily by thy margin waits;--

The nightingale, the marguerite;

In shadow here he meditates

His nest, his love, his music sweet.

 

Near thee the self-collected soul

Knows naught of error or of crime;

Thy waters, murmuring as they roll,

Transform his musings into rhyme.

 

Ah, when, on bright autumnal eves,

Pursuing still thy course, shall I

Lisp the soft shudder of the leaves,

And hear the lapwing's plaintive cry?

 

 

 

BARRÉGES