< Littell's Living Age < Volume 144 < Issue 1867
For works with similar titles, see Spring.

Sunshine streaming gaily,
  Skies of deeper blue,
Crimson-budded woodlands,
  Fields of greener hue,
Tell the winter-weary
  Spring returns anew.

All is now forgotten,
  As the wild-birds sing,
Of the biting north blast —
  Winter's numbing sting —
And of weary longing
  For the jocund spring.

For the vernal sweetness
  Screens the darksome past;
Light falls where the shadows
  Erst were grim and fast:
In the lifeful present
  All is joy at last.

Shouts and youthful laughter
  Rise from out the dells
Where the runlets babble,
  Where the primrose dwells,
Where the cups and daisies
  Leave their winter cells.

Over hill and valley,
  Through the meadows gay,
By the brimming rivers
  Countless roamers stray,
Glad and sunny-hearted
  As the sun-bright day.

Age and youth a-level,
  Sage and wayward boy,
Feel the sweet heart-throbbing,
  All the life and joy
Of bright April's bringing —
  Gifts that never cloy.

Sunlight streaming gaily,
  Rain in sunny showers,
Balmy west winds blowing,
  Groups of infant flowers,
Hearts with pleasure beating
  Fill the merry hours.

This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.