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IN the twilight of November,
When my fire is burning low,
And each faint and famished ember
Flickers with a dying glow,
Ah! how fondly I remember
Summer scenes that come and go!
Far away my fancy flying
Sees a spectral camp-fire shine;
From the deeps around me lying
Breathes the perfume of the pine;
And of every sound that's sighing
Speaks the spirit unto mine,
Till I hear the rushing river,
Singing birds, and sighing trees,
That with mellow murmur quiver
'Neath the gentle breathing breeze,
And the surging shock and shiver
Of the cold and throbbing seas.
Lies a lonely lake revealing
Where the moss-hung hemlocks wreathe
Softly-tinted fringes stealing
Far the water's face beneath;
Quickened is the pulse of feeling
Till I hear the silence breathe.
Steals a sunset o'er the surges,
Sinking seaward in the west;
From a clinging cloud emerges,
Filmy-blue, a mountain's crest;
And forgotten passion urges
Its sweet riot in my breast.
Quick, O memory, seize each ember
Of the soft and sunny past;
Let me every gleam remember
By thy colors painted fast;
That through all life's drear November
Summer in my heart may last.
C.
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