Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Second Flood by John Frederick Freeman
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The Second Flood

    By John Frederick Freeman



    How could I know, how could I guess
    That here was your great happiness--
    In mine? And how could I know
    Your love infinite must grow?

    Suddenly at dawn I wake
    To see the cruse of colour break
    Over the East, and then the gray
    Creep up with light of common day ...
    No, no, no! again that bright
    Flashing, flushing, flooding light
    Leading on day, until I ache
    With love to see the dark world wake.

    O, with such second flood your love
    Painted my earth and heaven above,
    With such wild magnificence
    As bruised my heart in every sense,
    In every nerve. Was ever man
    Fit this renewed love to sustain?

    Now in these days when Autumn's leaf
    Is red and gold, and for a brief
    Day the earth flowers ere it dies,
    What if Spring came with new surprise,
    Came ere the aspen shivered bare
    Or the beech coins glittered in cold air,
    Before the rough wind the maple stripped
    And this bare moon on bare boughs stepped!
    Vain thought--O, yet not wholly vain:
    Even to me Love has come again,
    Moving from your quick breast where he
    Fluttered in his wondering infancy.



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