Thy soul hath revelled in the forests green; The solemn purple plains; The immense far range of hills whose summits hoar Mix with the eternal blue; the ceaseless roar Of rivers swollen by Titanic rains: Somewhat thy soul hath gathered of the might Of thine America; by day, by night, Watching, thy gaze hath won A measured glimpse of what man's eyes shall see; While Europe's slaves to kings have bent the knee Thou, yokeless, hast been vassal of the sun: Thou, scaling thought's untrodden mountain-sides, Hast felt the heart of Freedom like a bride's Against thine own heart beat; While the old world struggled, cramped by prison-bars, Thou, seeking Freedom's palace lit by stars, Didst pass the heights where storms and the eagles meet. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NOW AND AFTERWARDS by DINAH MARIA MULOCK CRAIK THE IDEA OF BALANCE IS TO BE FOUND IN HERONS AND LOONS by JAMES HARRISON IN HOSPITAL: 28. DISCHARGED by WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY THE MAN-OF-WAR HAWK by HERMAN MELVILLE SONNET: 35 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE WINTER, FR. LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE TO THE QUEEN by ALFRED TENNYSON INCIDENT CHARACTERISTIC OF A FAVOURITE DOG by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH |