TO this green hill a something dream-like clings, Where day by day the little blunt sheep graze, Threading the tussocks and the toad-stool rings, Nosing the barrows of the olden days. An air drifts here that's sweet of sea and grass, And down the combe-side living colour glows; Spring, Summer, Fall, the chasing seasons pass To Winter, even lovelier than those. The dream is deep today, when all that's far Of wandering water and of darkling wood, Of weald and ghost-like Down combined are In haze below this hill where God has stood. Here I, too, stand until the light is gone, And feed my wonder, while the sheep graze on! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SONG OF THE BOW, FR. THE WHITE COMPANY by ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE MASKS by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE PLANTING by MARGARET LEE ASHLEY SONNETS OF MANHOOD: 39. NOT CHRIST, BUT CHRIST'S GOD by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) GOING BACK TO SCHOOL by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET JOB. THE INSCRUTABLE MYSTERY by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE |