S.H.D. Commonplace Book (16:35:1),
Martha Dickinson Bianchi Collection,
John Hay Library, Brown University Libraries
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Silence. James Russell Lowell
When the cup of hope brims over
And the soul hath drunk its fill,
When the loved one meets the lover
And their hearts in sunshine hover
With one impulse and one will, -
Then the useless tongue is still.
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When the heart is bare of gladness
And the helpless sense of ill
Goads the apathy of sadness
Onward, through a whirl of madness
To a darkness drear[?] and chill, -
Then the palsied tongue is still.
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When the soul for Power sigheth,
Struggling for Art's fuller skill,
And the prophet heart o'erflieth
All the agony that trieth,
All the tear drops it must spill, -
Then the traced tongue is still.
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When two hearts that love are parted,
And truth lingers but to kill,
When they strive to be hardhearted
And the props of life are started
With a timor and a thrill
Then the choking tongue is still
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