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The Arctic Lover.

By William Cullen Bryant

Topics: classic

Gone is the long, long winter night;     Look, my beloved one!     How glorious, through his depths of light,     Rolls the majestic sun!     The willows, waked from winter's death,     Give out a fragrance like thy breath,     The summer is begun!     Ay, 'tis the long bright summer day:     Hark, to that mighty crash!     The loosened ice-ridge breaks away,     The smitten waters flash.     Seaward the glittering mountain rides,     While, down its green translucent sides,     The foamy torrents dash.     See, love, my boat is moored for thee,     By ocean's weedy floor,     The petrel does not skim the sea     More swiftly than my oar.     We'll go, where, on the rocky isles,     Her eggs the screaming sea-fowl piles     Beside the pebbly shore.     Or, bide thou where the poppy blows,     With wind-flowers frail and fair,     While I, upon his isle of snows,     Seek and defy the bear.     Fierce though he be, and huge of frame,     This arm his savage strength shall tame,     And drag him from his lair.     When crimson sky and flamy cloud     Bespeak the summer o'er,     And the dead valleys wear a shroud     Of snows that melt no more,     I'll build of ice thy winter home,     With glistening walls and glassy dome,     And spread with skins the floor.     The white fox by thy couch shall play;     And, from the frozen skies,     The meteors of a mimic day     Shall flash upon thine eyes.     And I, for such thy vow, meanwhile     Shall hear thy voice and see thy smile,     Till that long midnight flies.

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"Gone is the long, long winter night;..."

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Author:William Cullen Bryant

"Gone is the long, long winter night;..." by William Cullen Bryant

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

William Cullen Bryant

About William Cullen Bryant

William Cullen Bryant (1794–1878) was an American poet and journalist. His poem "Thanatopsis" (1817) was the first major American poem. He edited the New York Evening Post for 50 years and was a champion of American poetry.

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