HERE be rural graces, sylvan places, Bright-hearted brooks that chanting fall, Leys and fallows, reedy rustling shallows, Colours and musics rustical. O the silvery cherry, the visionary, Templed in dewy dim green pleasance Where moths flutter bloom-like -- who shall utter The shining wonder of her presence? Nor shall midnight veil her, hushed moon fail her, Nor lack true lover then shall she; Breathed from sleeping orchards afar shall come creeping A long long sigh to the darling tree. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LIVE AND HELP LIVE by EDWIN MARKHAM THE NIGHT MAIL NORTH (EUSTON SQUARE, 1840) by HENRY CHOLMONDELEY-PENNELL THE OLD FAMILIAR FACES by CHARLES LAMB THE MORAL FABLES: THE WOLF AND THE WETHER by AESOP REALISM by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH SONNET: TO L.T. IN FLORENCE by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH |