Public Domain Poetry And Stories - To The Miami by Paul Laurence Dunbar
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To The Miami

    By Paul Laurence Dunbar



    Kiss me, Miami, thou most constant one!
    I love thee more for that thou changest not.
    When Winter comes with frigid blast,
    Or when the blithesome Spring is past
    And Summer's here with sunshine hot,
    Or in sere Autumn, thou has still the pow'r
    To charm alike, whate'er the hour.

    Kiss me, Miami, with thy dewy lips;
    Throbs fast my heart e'en as thine own breast beats.
    My soul doth rise as rise thy waves,
    As each on each the dark shore laves
    And breaks in ripples and retreats.
    There is a poem in thine every phase;
    Thou still has sung through all thy days.

    Tell me, Miami, how it was with thee
    When years ago Tecumseh in his prime
    His birch boat o'er thy waters sent,
    And pitched upon thy banks his tent.
    In that long-gone, poetic time,
    Did some bronze bard thy flowing stream sit by
    And sing thy praises, e'en as I?

    Did some bronze lover 'neath this dark old tree
    Whisper of love unto his Indian maid?
    And didst thou list his murmurs deep,
    And in thy bosom safely keep
    The many raging vows they said?
    Or didst thou tell to fish and frog and bird
    The raptured scenes that there occurred?

    But, O dear stream, what volumes thou couldst tell
    To all who know thy language as I do,
    Of life and love and jealous hate!
    But now to tattle were too late,--
    Thou who hast ever been so true.
    Tell not to every passing idler here
    All those sweet tales that reached thine ear.

    But, silent stream, speak out and tell me this:
    I say that men and things are still the same;
    Were men as bold to do and dare?
    Were women then as true and fair?
    Did poets seek celestial flame,
    The hero die to gain a laureled brow,
    And women suffer, then as now?



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