Words for the Hour/Ade

ADÉ.
A truce, a truce, a gallant truce!
A hand flung up, and a shout of cheer;
The toiling hand that has sped and spun
   The labor of the year.

Farewell, ye turbulent hosts of rhyme,
Whose wrangling wrought such ill-content,
Farewell, ye beggarly broken lines,
   A Falstaff regiment.

The sour and sweet I could not taste
Till ye had sat and drunk your fill
The life i bore was never mine,
   But yours to waste at will.

Oh! yon, where the sunset's heart is warm
A fair bird singeth, sorrow-free;
I am his Sister belov'd, he says,
   And, wistful, he waits for me.

No bird of Juno's nor of Jove's,
Nor Pallas, blinking thro' day-shut eyes;
But a mate-dove, loving so faithfully,
   That Love did make him wise.

And we will sit as on burnished gold,
The earth-ball rolling at our feet,
And whisper of things which, had they been,
   Had been for song too sweet.