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Poems and Songs, by Bjornstjerne Bjornson |
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HOLGER DRACHMANN (See Note 70) |
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_ Spring's herald, hail! You've rent the forest's quiet? Your hair is wet, and you are leaf-strewn, dusty ... With your powers lusty Have you raised a riot? What noise about you of the flood set free, That follows at your heels,--turn back and see: It spurts upon you! --Was it that you fought for? You were in there where stumps and trunks are rotting Where long the winter-graybeards have been plotting To prison safe that which a lock they wrought for. But power gave you Pan, the ancient god! They cried aloud and cursed your future lot? Your gallant feat they held a robber's fraud? --Each spring it happens; but is soon forgot. You cast you down beside the salt sea's wave. But while on nature's loving lap you lie, And so is torn between the two your breast:-- Your songs sound, some as were a war-horn braying, But as you seem and as yourself you are Just this it is that we are needing now: Rather a draught of Songs Venetian, cheerful, Spring's herald, hail! come from the forest's choir, |