I set out for the Land of Content, By the gay crowded pleasure-highway, With laughter, and jesting, I went With the mirth-loving throng for a day; Then I knew I had wandered astray, For I met returned pilgrims, belated, Who said, "We are weary and sated, But we found not the Land of Content." I turned to the steep path of fame, I said, "It is over yon height -- This land with the beautiful name -- Ambition will lend me its light." But I paused in my journey ere night, For the way grew so lonely and troubled; I said -- my anxiety doubled -- "This is not the road to Content" Then I joined the great rabble and throng That frequents the moneyed world's mart; But the greed, and the grasping and wrong, Left me only one wish -- to depart. And sickened, and saddened at heart, I hurried away from the gateway, For my soul and my spirit said straightway, "This is not the road to Content." Then weary in body and brain, An overgrown path I detected, And I said "I will hide with my pain In this by-way, unused and neglected." Lo! it led to the realm God selected To crown with his best gifts of beauty, And through the dark pathway of duty I came to the land of Content. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LEEDLE YAWCOB STRAUSS by CHARLES FOLLEN ADAMS MY HEART'S IN THE HIGHLANDS by ROBERT BURNS TO S-----D (2) by WILLIAM BLAKE AN OFFERING by ANNE MILLAY BREMER GERTRUDE OF WYOMING; OR, THE PENNSYLVANIAN COTTAGE: 3 by THOMAS CAMPBELL SONG OF THE INDIAN MOTHER by JAMES GOWDY CLARK TO MISS A. T. by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE |