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THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH

James Russell Lowell

I

 

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

By no sadder spirit

Than blackbirds and thrushes,

That whistle to cheer it

All day in the bushes.

This woodland is haunted:

And in a small clearing,

Beyond sight or hearing

Of human annoyance,

The little fount gushes, 10

First smoothly, then dashes

And gurgles and flashes,

To the maples and ashes

Confiding its joyance;

Unconscious confiding,

Then, silent and glossy,

Slips winding and hiding

Through alder-stems mossy,

Through gossamer roots

Fine as nerves, 20

That tremble, as shoots

Through their magnetized curves

The allurement delicious

Of the water's capricious

Thrills, gushes, and swerves.

 

II

 

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

I am writing no fiction;

And this fount, its sole daughter,

To the woodland was granted

To pour holy water 30

And win benediction;

In summer-noon flushes,

When all the wood hushes,

Blue dragon-flies knitting

To and fro in the sun,

With sidelong jerk flitting

Sink down on the rashes,

And, motionless sitting,

Hear it bubble and run,

Hear its low inward singing, 40

With level wings swinging

On green tasselled rushes,

To dream in the sun.