TWENTY-OLD AND SEVEN-WILD

TWENTY-OLD AND SEVEN-WILD

O TWENTY, running through the wood!Where friendly leaves and grasses stir,Where airs are sweet and trees are strong,And hiding birds call out to her,And every little timid thingThat creeps within the woods to singSeems just to have a voice for her.O Twenty, running through the wood!A woman grown, and yet a child!Now in the sun, now in the shade—The wild gone out to meet the wild.And who can say life is not sweetTo eager eyes and fearless feetTo Twenty-old and Seven-wild.She leaves the quiet road that windsIts pretty way the whole wood throughAnd makes a pathway for herself,As who at Twenty would not do?Unseen and seen, the wind and sheGo through the bush and round the tree—Go roving 'round and singing through.Such pleasure just to lose herself!O Seven-wild! O Twenty-old!The shadows stealing from the nightTread measures strange with gleams of gold.And Mayflowers lift their faces pink:—Now who could look at them and thinkOf being young or being old?O Twenty, running through the wood!Its wildness has a power to still;The voices low from rock and twigThe silences with music thrill,—And suddenlyshesilent grows,And, searching out the path she knows,Turns back—but carries home the thrill.

O TWENTY, running through the wood!Where friendly leaves and grasses stir,Where airs are sweet and trees are strong,And hiding birds call out to her,And every little timid thingThat creeps within the woods to singSeems just to have a voice for her.O Twenty, running through the wood!A woman grown, and yet a child!Now in the sun, now in the shade—The wild gone out to meet the wild.And who can say life is not sweetTo eager eyes and fearless feetTo Twenty-old and Seven-wild.She leaves the quiet road that windsIts pretty way the whole wood throughAnd makes a pathway for herself,As who at Twenty would not do?Unseen and seen, the wind and sheGo through the bush and round the tree—Go roving 'round and singing through.Such pleasure just to lose herself!O Seven-wild! O Twenty-old!The shadows stealing from the nightTread measures strange with gleams of gold.And Mayflowers lift their faces pink:—Now who could look at them and thinkOf being young or being old?O Twenty, running through the wood!Its wildness has a power to still;The voices low from rock and twigThe silences with music thrill,—And suddenlyshesilent grows,And, searching out the path she knows,Turns back—but carries home the thrill.

O TWENTY, running through the wood!Where friendly leaves and grasses stir,Where airs are sweet and trees are strong,And hiding birds call out to her,And every little timid thingThat creeps within the woods to singSeems just to have a voice for her.

O TWENTY, running through the wood!

Where friendly leaves and grasses stir,

Where airs are sweet and trees are strong,

And hiding birds call out to her,

And every little timid thing

That creeps within the woods to sing

Seems just to have a voice for her.

O Twenty, running through the wood!A woman grown, and yet a child!Now in the sun, now in the shade—The wild gone out to meet the wild.And who can say life is not sweetTo eager eyes and fearless feetTo Twenty-old and Seven-wild.

O Twenty, running through the wood!

A woman grown, and yet a child!

Now in the sun, now in the shade—

The wild gone out to meet the wild.

And who can say life is not sweet

To eager eyes and fearless feet

To Twenty-old and Seven-wild.

She leaves the quiet road that windsIts pretty way the whole wood throughAnd makes a pathway for herself,As who at Twenty would not do?Unseen and seen, the wind and sheGo through the bush and round the tree—Go roving 'round and singing through.

She leaves the quiet road that winds

Its pretty way the whole wood through

And makes a pathway for herself,

As who at Twenty would not do?

Unseen and seen, the wind and she

Go through the bush and round the tree—

Go roving 'round and singing through.

Such pleasure just to lose herself!O Seven-wild! O Twenty-old!The shadows stealing from the nightTread measures strange with gleams of gold.And Mayflowers lift their faces pink:—Now who could look at them and thinkOf being young or being old?

Such pleasure just to lose herself!

O Seven-wild! O Twenty-old!

The shadows stealing from the night

Tread measures strange with gleams of gold.

And Mayflowers lift their faces pink:—

Now who could look at them and think

Of being young or being old?

O Twenty, running through the wood!Its wildness has a power to still;The voices low from rock and twigThe silences with music thrill,—And suddenlyshesilent grows,And, searching out the path she knows,Turns back—but carries home the thrill.

O Twenty, running through the wood!

Its wildness has a power to still;

The voices low from rock and twig

The silences with music thrill,—

And suddenlyshesilent grows,

And, searching out the path she knows,

Turns back—but carries home the thrill.


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