ACROSS THE DYKES

ACROSS THE DYKES

THE dykes half bare are lying in the bathOf quivering sunlight on this Sunday morn,And bobolinks aflock make sweet the wornOld places, where two centuries of swathHave fallen to earth before the mower's path.Across the dykes the bell's low sound is borneFrom green Grand Pré, abundant with the corn,With milk and honey which it always hath.—And now I hear the Angelus ring far;See faith bow many a head that suffered wrong,Near all these plains they wrested from the tide!I see the vision of their final griefs that marThe greenness of these meadows; in the songOf birds I feel a tear that has not dried.

THE dykes half bare are lying in the bathOf quivering sunlight on this Sunday morn,And bobolinks aflock make sweet the wornOld places, where two centuries of swathHave fallen to earth before the mower's path.Across the dykes the bell's low sound is borneFrom green Grand Pré, abundant with the corn,With milk and honey which it always hath.—And now I hear the Angelus ring far;See faith bow many a head that suffered wrong,Near all these plains they wrested from the tide!I see the vision of their final griefs that marThe greenness of these meadows; in the songOf birds I feel a tear that has not dried.

THE dykes half bare are lying in the bathOf quivering sunlight on this Sunday morn,And bobolinks aflock make sweet the wornOld places, where two centuries of swathHave fallen to earth before the mower's path.Across the dykes the bell's low sound is borneFrom green Grand Pré, abundant with the corn,With milk and honey which it always hath.—And now I hear the Angelus ring far;See faith bow many a head that suffered wrong,Near all these plains they wrested from the tide!I see the vision of their final griefs that marThe greenness of these meadows; in the songOf birds I feel a tear that has not dried.

THE dykes half bare are lying in the bath

Of quivering sunlight on this Sunday morn,

And bobolinks aflock make sweet the worn

Old places, where two centuries of swath

Have fallen to earth before the mower's path.

Across the dykes the bell's low sound is borne

From green Grand Pré, abundant with the corn,

With milk and honey which it always hath.—

And now I hear the Angelus ring far;

See faith bow many a head that suffered wrong,

Near all these plains they wrested from the tide!

I see the vision of their final griefs that mar

The greenness of these meadows; in the song

Of birds I feel a tear that has not dried.


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