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THE DEAD TREE IN THE FOREST.
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There was music in the fountain
That went sparkling at his feet;
There was sweetness where the flowers
Nestled in their green retreat;
And the southern breezes offered
(Wandering joyous and elate),
Incense to his lofty comrades,
Heedless of his lone estate.

And the deep and far-off river,
Whose majestic murmurs stole
On the air with gathering glory,
Like the swelling of a soul
When it bounds, to burst asunder
Bands that held it captive long,
Failed to waken one pulsation
With its ever-sounding song.

Yet the sunset, softly sparkling,
Fell upon his aged brow,
And his bare and withered branches
Smiled beneath the summer-glow;
And I read my heart a lesson
Of that old and lonely tree,
As it stood within the sunshine,
Looking upward reverently.

Like a poor man, 'midst the grandeur
And the glory of the great,
Standing silent and forsaken,
Sad, forlorn, and desolate,—