Yet once again do I behold the forms Of these huge mountains, and yet once again, Standing beneath these elms, I hear thy voice, Beloved Derwent, that peculiar voice Heard in the stillness of the evening air, Half-heard and half-created. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNET (ON AN OLD BOOK WITH UNCUT LEAVES) by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR PLACES: 2. FULL MOON (SANTA BARBARA) by SARA TEASDALE EFFICIENCY by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS WRITTEN ON A GLOOMY DAY, IN SICKNESS. THACKWOOD, 4TH JUNE, 1786 by SUSANNA BLAMIRE WHAT'S IN A NAME by BERTON BRALEY VOID IN LAW by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING SENT TO A GENTLEMAN WHO HE HAD OFFENDED by ROBERT BURNS |