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1871–1926

III

Francis Sherman

A little while before the Fall was done A day came when the frail year paused and said: “Behold! a little while and I am dead; Wilt thou not choose, of all the old dreams, one?”

Then dwelt I in a garden, where the sun Shone always, and the roses all were red; Far off, the great sea slept, and overhead, Among the robins, matins had begun.

And I knew not at all it was a dream Only, and that the year was near its close; Garden and sunshine, robin-song and rose, The half-heard murmur and the distant gleam

Of all the unvext sea, a little space Were as a mist above the Autumn's face.

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III · Francis Sherman · Poetry Cove