HE'S not the happy man, to whom is given A plenteous fortune by indulgent Heaven; Whose gilded roofs on shining columns rise, And painted walls enchant the gazer's eyes: Whose table flows with hospitable cheer, And all the various bounty of the year; Whose valleys smile, whose gardens breathe the spring, Whose carved mountains bleat, and forests sing? For whom the cooling shade in summer twines, While his full cellars give their generous wines; From whose wide fields unbounded autumn pours A golden tide into his swelling stores: Whose winter laughs; for whom the liberal gales Stretch the big sheet, and toiling commerce sails; When yielding crowds attend, and pleasure serves; While youth, and health, and vigour string his nerves. E'en not all these, in one rich lot combined, Can make the happy man, without the mind: Where judgment sits clear-sighted, and surveys The chain of reason with unerring gaze; Where fancy lives, and to the brightening eyes, His fairer scenes, and bolder figures rise; Where social love exerts her soft command, And lays the passions with a tender hand, Whence every virtue flows, in rival strife, And all the moral harmony of life. Nor canst thou, Dodington, this truth decline -- Thine is the fortune, and the mind is thine. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...GLAMOUR by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON AFFIRMATION by LOUIS UNTERMEYER SONNET TO THE AUTUMNAL MOON by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE EPITAPHS OF THE WAR, 1914-18: A DRIFTER OFF TARENTUM by RUDYARD KIPLING THE EAGLE THAT IS FORGOTTEN by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY THE BABY, FR. AT THE BACK OF THE NORTH WIND by GEORGE MACDONALD |