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THE HILL MAPLES.
[L. M. Montgomery in Zion's Herald.]
Here on a hill of the occident stand we
shoulder to shoulder,
Comrades tried and true through a
mighty swath of the years!
Spring harps glad laughter through us, and
ministrant rains of the autumn
Sing us again the songs of ancient dolor
and tears.
The glory of sunrise smites on our fair,
free brows uplifted
When the silver-? day steps over
the twilight's bars;
At evening we look down into valleys
hearted with sunset,
And we whisper old lore together un-
der the smoldering stars.
Crescent moons of the summer gleam
through our swaying branches,
Knee-deep in fern we stand while the
days of the sun-time go;
And the winds of winter love us -- the keen,
gay winds of the winter,
Coming to our gray arms from over the
plains of snow.
Down in the valleys beneath us is wooing
and winning and wedding,
Down in the long, dim valleys earth chil-
dren wail and weep;
But here on these free hills we grow and
are strong and flourish.
Comrades shoulder to shoulder our watch
of the years to keep.
THE WELCOMING.
(Theodocia Garrison, in "Smart Set.")
We were alone what time you said
Your last farewell to me,
Ere yet you joined the happy dead
In their fair company.
God grant our meeting be like this
In heaven's loneliest ring,
Lest angels envy us the bliss
Of that first welcoming!