One may be taken, trembling, in a rhyme. [8] [8] EXILED Sensing these sweet renewals through the earth, Where seed and soil most happily conspire To furnish forth gay rituals of mirth, Of shaken leaves and pointed blooms of fire,— I wonder then that thoughtful man, alone, Walks darkly and all puzzled with a doubt, Bewildered, and in truth, half-fearful grown Of wild, wild earth and April's joyous rout. When we are dust again with soil and seed, With happy earth through many a happy Spring, We yet may learn that joy was all our need,— That man's long thought is but a broken wing, Of less account, as things may come to pass, Than Spring's first robin breasting through the grass. [9] [9]