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 Birds Of Passage by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 
						Black shadows fallFrom the lindens tall,
 That lift aloft their massive wall
 Against the southern sky;
 
 And from the realms
 Of the shadowy elms
 A tide-like darkness overwhelm
 The fields that round us lie.
 
 But the night is fair,
 And everywhere
 A warm, soft vapor fills the air,
 And distant sounds seem near;
 
 And above, in the light
 Of the star-lit night,
 Swift birds of passage wing their flight
 Through the dewy atmosphere.
 
 I hear the beat
 Of their pinions fleet,
 As from the land of snow and sleet
 They seek a southern lea.
 
 I hear the cry
 Of their voices high
 Falling dreamily through the sky,
 But their forms I cannot see.
 
 Oh, say not so!
 Those sounds that flow
 In murmurs of delight and woe
 Come not from wings of birds.
 
 They are the throngs
 Of the poet's songs,
 Murmurs of pleasures, and pains, and wrongs,
 The sound of winged words.
 
 This is the cry
 Of souls, that high
 On toiling, beating pinions, fly,
 Seeking a warmer clime.
 
 From their distant flight
 Through realms of light
 It falls into our world of night,
 With the murmuring sound of rhyme.
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