Evening Song

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I stood on the mountain summit,
  At the hour when the sun did set;
  I mark'd how it hung o'er the woodland
  The evening's golden net.

  And, with the dew descending,
  A peace on the earth there fell--
  And nature lay hushed in quiet,
  At the voice of the evening bell.

  I said, "O heart, consider
  What silence all things keep,
  And with each child of the meadow
  Prepare thyself to sleep!

  "For every flower is closing
  In silence its little eye;
  And every wave in the brooklet
  More softly murmureth by.

  "The weary caterpillar
  Hath nestled beneath the weeds;
  All wet with dew now slumbers
  The dragon-fly in the reeds.

  "The golden beetle hath laid him
  In a rose-leaf cradle to rock;
  Now went to their nightly shelter
  The shepherd and his flock.

  "The lark from on high is seeking
  In the moistened grass her nest;
  The hart and the hind have laid them
  In their woodland haunt to rest.

  "And whoso owneth a cottage
  To slumber hath laid him down;
  And he that roams among strangers
  In dreams shall behold his own."

  And now doth a yearning seize me,
  At this hour of peace and love,
  That I cannot reach the dwelling,
  The home that is mine, above.

© Friedrich Rückert