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1837–1913

XXXI.

Joaquin Miller

And now the moon wheel'd white and vast, A round, unbroken, marbled moon, And touch'd the far bright buttes of snow, Then climb'd their shoulders over soon;

And there she seem'd to sit at last, To hang, to hover there, to grow, Grow vaster than vast peaks of snow. Grow whiter than the snow's own breast,

Grow softer than September's noon, Until the snow-peaks seem'd at best But one wide, shining, shatter'd moon. She sat the battlements of time;

She shone in mail of frost and rime, A time, and then rose up and stood In heaven in sad widowhood. The faded moon fell wearily,

And then the sun right suddenly Rose up full arm'd, and rushing came Across the land like flood of flame.

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XXXI. · Joaquin Miller · Poetry Cove