Oh, leave me to my own; Unglorified -- perchance unknown, One of a nameless band Of gipsy cloud and silent butte and fir. Oh, let me stand Against the whipping wind, in the lavender Of dusk, like a mighty limber-pine At timber-line -- Unyielding, stiff, Unbent of head Among the ageless dead -- One with the mountain's cliff And the imperturbable stone. And when the winter gales intone Among my boughs a dread And melancholy sweep Of song and some mysterious hand Brushes my heart In a mournful melody, weep No tear for me, nor moan -- Pray stand apart From me, and leave me to my own; For in the high blue valleys of this land, When the afterglow Lingers among the glaciers, I shall know Again the calm Of dusk, the dewy balm Of sleep, release From pain -- and utter peace. Oh leave me to the wild companionship Of days that toss In the windy night and drip Their wild wet rains upon the moss; To the columbine That strives to slip Shyly among my roots and tip Its sparkling wine Upon my grassy shrine; To the brotherhood Of bending skies bestrown With stars above the soundless solitude -- Of waterfalls that fling upon the night A stony broken music from their height -- Oh, leave me to my own. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE: 26 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING NEUTRALITY LOATHSOME by ROBERT HERRICK EPITAPHS OF THE WAR, 1914-18: THE COWARD by RUDYARD KIPLING THE CITY CHILD by ALFRED TENNYSON |