Not in my lack, but my satiety, High Hermitage, you tell, lay my defeat; Nor ever solitude for him could be, Divested thus, yet in himself complete. As the orange, luscious from the bitter root, The chastened thought through once the knitted brow. This is the scant, though ever sweeter fruit That early ripens on the withered bough. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PUSSY-WILLOW TIME by ROBERT FROST AMOUR by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON SORROW SINGERS by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON VOLUPTAS by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON DAUGHTERS OF JEPHTHA by LOUIS UNTERMEYER OWEN SEAMAN; ESTABLISHES ENTENE CORDIALE IN MANNER GUY WETMORE CARRYL by LOUIS UNTERMEYER |