CHANGELESS in beauty, rose-hues on her cheek, Old walls, old trees, old memories all around Lend her unfading youth their charm antique And fill with mystic light her holy ground. Here the lost dove her leaf of promise found While the new morning showed its blushing streak Far o'er the waters she had crossed to seek The bleak, wild shore in billowy forests drowned. Mother of scholars! on thy rising throne Thine elder sisters look benignant down; England's proud twins, and they whose cloisters own The fame of Abelard, the scarlet gown That laughing Rabelais wore, not yet outgrown -- And on thy forehead place the New World's crown. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ILLINOIS FARMER by CARL SANDBURG THE METROPOLITAN TOWER by SARA TEASDALE THE LIVING DEAD by RALPH CHAPLIN A VISION OF CONNAUGHT IN THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN AT A SOLEMN MUSIC by JOHN MILTON UNDERWOODS: BOOK 1: 22. THE CELESTIAL SURGEON by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON CHRISTMAS EPITHALAMIUM by WILLIAM HERVEY ALLEN JR. BUILDING THE LIBRARY, TOKYO UNIVERSITY; NIGHT SCENE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN |