As I walked out in meadows green I heard the summer noon resound With call of myriad things unseen That leapt and crept upon the ground. High overhead the windless air Throbbed with the homesick coursing cry Of swifts that ranging everywhere Woke echo in the sky. Beside me, too, clear waters coursed Which willow branches, lapsing low, Breaking their crystal gliding forced To sing as they did flow. I listened; and my heart was dumb With praise no language could express; Longing in vain for him to come Who had breathed such blessedness On this fair world, wherein we pass So chequered and so brief a stay; And yearned in spirit to learn, alas, What kept him still away. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MEMORIAL VERSES by MATTHEW ARNOLD HARRIET BEECHER STOWE by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR THE LATTER DAY by THOMAS HASTINGS THE HIGHER GOOD by THEODORE PARKER ON CHLORIS WALKING IN THE SNOW by WILLIAM STRODE VILLAGE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN BRITANNIA'S PASTORALS: BOOK 1. TO WILLIAM, EARL OF PEMBROKE by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643) |