BECAUSE the years are few, I must be glad; Because the silence is so near, I sing; 'Twere ill to quit an inn where I have had Such bounteous fare nor pay my reckoning. I would not, from some gleaming parapet Of Sirius or Vega, bend my gaze On a remembered sparkle and regret That from it thanklessly I went my ways Up through the starry colonnades nor found Violets in any Paradise more blue Than those that blossomed on my own waste ground Nor vespers sweeter than the robins knew. Though Earth be but an outpost of delight, Heaven's wild frontier by tragedy beset, Only a Shakespeare may her gifts requite, Only a happy Raphael pay his debt. Yet I, to whom, even as to these, are given Cascading foam, emblazoned butterflies, The moon's pearl chariot through the massed clouds driven, And the divinity of loving eyes, Would make my peace now with mine hostess Earth, Give and take pardon for all brief annoy, And toss her, far beneath my lodging's worth, Poor that I am, a coin of golden joy. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HOMAGE TO SEXTUS PROPERTIUS: 9 by EZRA POUND NAPEOLON'S FAREWELL; FROM THE FRENCH by GEORGE GORDON BYRON TIME TO BE WISE by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR ON RECEIPT OF A RARE PIPE by W. H. B. SONG: BUTTERFLIES by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT BLACKBIRDS by CLARA EXLINE BOCKOVEN THE CANTERBURY TALES: THE CLERK'S PROLOGUE by GEOFFREY CHAUCER |