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The Poems of Henry Van Dyke by Henry Van Dyke
page 85 of 481 (17%)
A world of many meanings but no words,
A silent world was Vera's home.
For her
The inner doors of sound were closely sealed
The outer portals, delicate as shells
Suffused with faintest rose of far-off morn,
Like underglow of daybreak in the sea,--
The ear-gates of the garden of her soul,
Shaded by drooping tendrils of brown hair,--
Waited in vain for messengers to pass,
And thread the labyrinth with flying feet,
And swiftly knock upon the inmost door,
And enter in, and speak the mystic word.
But through those gates no message ever came.
Only with eyes did she behold and see,--
With eyes as luminous and bright and brown
As waters of a woodland river,--eyes
That questioned so they almost seemed to speak,
And answered so they almost seemed to hear,--
Only with wondering eyes did she behold
The silent splendour of a living world.

She saw the great wind ranging freely down
Interminable archways of the wood,
While tossing boughs and bending tree-tops hailed
His coming: but no sea-toned voice of pines,
No roaring of the oaks, no silvery song
Of poplars or of birches, followed him.
He passed; they waved their arms and clapped their hands;
There was no sound.
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