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Lines written after a summer day's excursion.Fair Nature's priestesses! to whom,In hieroglyph of bud and bloom,Her mysteries are told;Who, wise in lore of wood and mead,The seasons' pictured scrolls can read,In lessons manifold!Thanks for the courtesy, and gayGood-humor, which on Washing DayOur ill-timed visit bore;Thanks for your graceful oars, which brokeThe morning dreams of Artichoke,Along his wooded shore!Varied as varying Nature's ways,Sprites of the river, woodland fays,Or mountain nymphs, ye seem;Free-limbed Dianas on the green,Loch Katrine's Ellen, or Undine,Upon your favorite stream.The forms of which the poets told,The fair benignities of old,Were doubtless such as yo...
John Greenleaf Whittier
At Rome
O, richly soiled and richly sunned,Exuberant, fervid, and fecund!Is this the fixed conditionOn which may Northern pilgrim come,To imbibe thine ether-air, and sumThy store of old tradition?Must we be chill, if clean, and standFoot-deep in dirt on classic land?So is it: in all ages so,And in all places man can know,From homely roots unseen belowThe stem in forest, field, and bower,Derives the emanative powerThat crowns it with the ethereal flower,From mixtures foetid, foul, and sourDraws juices that those petals fill.Ah Nature, if indeed thy willThou ownst it, it shall not be ill!And truly here, in this quick clime,Where, scarcely bound by space or time,The elements in half a dayToss off with exquisitest...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Why Should The Enthusiast, Journeying Through This Isle
Why should the Enthusiast, journeying through this IsleRepine as if his hour were come too late?Not unprotected in her mouldering state,Antiquity salutes him with a smile,'Mid fruitful fields that ring with jocund toil,And pleasure-grounds where Taste, refined Co-mateOf Truth and Beauty, strives to imitate,Far as she may, primeval Nature's style.Fair land! by Time's parental love made free,By Social Order's watchful arms embraced;With unexampled union meet in thee,For eye and mind, the present and the past;With golden prospect for futurity,If that be reverenced which ought to last.
William Wordsworth
Norse Nature (In Ringerike During The Student Meeting Of 1869)
(See Note 39)We wander and sing with gleeOf glorious Norway, fair to see.Let sweetly the tones go twiningIn colors so softly shiningOn mountain, forest, fjord, and shore,'Neath heaven's azure arching o'er.The warmth of the nation's heart,The depth, the strength, its songs impart,Here opens its eyes to greet you,Rejoicing just now to meet you,And giving, grateful for the chance,In love a self-revealing glance.Here wakened our history first,Here Halfdan dreamed of greatness erst,In vision of hope beholdingThe kingdom's future unfolding,And Nore stood and summons gave,While forth to conquest called the wave.Here singing we must unrollOf our dear land the pictured scroll!Let calm turn to ...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Hymn To Science
Science! thou fair effusive rayFrom the great source of mental day,Free, generous, and refin'd!Descend with all thy treasures fraught,Illumine each bewilder'd thought,And bless my lab'ring mind.But first with thy resistless light,Disperse those phantoms from my sight,Those mimic shades of thee;The scholiast's learning, sophist's cant,The visionary bigot's rant,The monk's philosophy.O! let thy powerful charms impartThe patient head, the candid heart,Devoted to thy sway;Which no weak passions e'er mislead,Which still with dauntless steps proceedWhere Reason points the way.Give me to learn each secret cause;Let number's, figure's, motion's lawsReveal'd before me stand;These to great Nature's scenes a...
Mark Akenside
The Instinct Of Hope
Is there another world for this frail dustTo warm with life and be itself again?Something about me daily speaks there must,And why should instinct nourish hopes in vain?'Tis nature's prophesy that such will be,And everything seems struggling to explainThe close sealed volume of its mystery.Time wandering onward keeps its usual paceAs seeming anxious of eternity,To meet that calm and find a resting place.E'en the small violet feels a future powerAnd waits each year renewing blooms to bring,And surely man is no inferior flowerTo die unworthy of a second spring?
John Clare
Circles
Nature centres into balls,And her proud ephemerals,Fast to surface and outside,Scan the profile of the sphere;Knew they what that signified,A new genesis were here.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Birth Of Pleasure.
At the creation of the EarthPleasure, that divinest birth,From the soil of Heaven did rise,Wrapped in sweet wild melodies -Like an exhalation wreathingTo the sound of air low-breathingThrough Aeolian pines, which makeA shade and shelter to the lakeWhence it rises soft and slow;Her life-breathing [limbs] did flowIn the harmony divineOf an ever-lengthening lineWhich enwrapped her perfect formWith a beauty clear and warm.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Nature In Leasts
As sings the pine-tree in the wind,So sings in the wind a sprig of the pine;Her strength and soul has laughing FranceShed in each drop of wine.
To Nature
It may indeed be fantasy when IEssay to draw from all created thingsDeep, heartfelt, inward joy that closely clings;And trace in leaves and flowers that round me lieLessons of love and earnest piety.So let it be; and if the wide world ringsIn mock of this belief, it bringsNor fear, nor grief, nor vain perplexity.So will I build my altar in the fields,And the blue sky my fretted dome shall be,And the sweet fragrance that the wild flower yieldsShall be the incense I will yield to Thee,Thee only God! and thou shalt not despiseEven me, the priest of this poor sacrifice.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Patience Taught By Nature
'O dreary life,' we cry, 'O dreary life!'And still the generations of the birdsSing through our sighing, and the flocks and herdsSerenely live while we are keeping strifeWith Heaven's true purpose in us, as a knifeAgainst which we may struggle! Ocean girdsUnslackened the dry land, savannah-swardsUnweary sweep, hills watch unworn, and rifeMeek leaves drop yearly from the forest-treesTo show, above, the unwasted stars that passIn their old glory: O thou God of old,Grant me some smaller grace than comes to these!But so much patience as a blade of grassGrows by, contented through the heat and cold.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Things Mysterious.
This earth's a mystery profound,Its movements, make, and changes all -A mystery which none can sound,Who dwell upon the whirling ball.And deeper far than all the rest,Is man; a mystery unsolvedSince the first heave of ocean's breast,Since the first course our earth revolv'd.His thoughts, and e'en his actions too,Possess a subtle meaning, whenThat meaning others may construe,As plain and open to their ken.There is a place in every heart,As secret as the silent tomb,Where others have no lot nor part,Where none may gaze, where none may room.It seemeth strange, that flesh and bloodShould hold such ghostly, hellish things,And also things supremely good,Which might not shame an angel's wings.Yet s...
Thomas Frederick Young
On Seeing Miss Fontenelle In A Favourite Character.
Sweet naiveté of feature, Simple, wild, enchanting elf, Not to thee, but thanks to nature, Thou art acting but thyself. Wert thou awkward, stiff, affected, Spurning nature, torturing art; Loves and graces all rejected, Then indeed thou'dst act a part.R. B.
Robert Burns
Beauty
A thing of beauty is a joy forever;Its loveliness increases; it will neverPass into nothingness; but still will keepA bower quiet for us, and a sleepFull of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.
Unknown
Landscape in the Early Morning
The air is gray. Who knows something good for soot?Next to an ox grazing on the groundStands an astonished deeply serious mountaineer.Soon there is a powerful downpour of rain.A young boy who is pissing on a meadowWill be the source of a small river.What should one do when nature calls!Be natural. Be yourself.A poet roams around in the world,Observes for himself the orderly flow of trafficAnd rejoices about sky, field, and dung.Ah, and he takes careful notice of everything.Then he climbs a high mountainWhich happens to be close by.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Constancy to an Ideal Object
Since all, that beat about in Nature's range,Or veer or vanish; why should'st thou remainThe only constant in a world of change,O yearning THOUGHT! that liv'st but in the brain?Call to the HOURS, that in the distance play,The faery people of the future dayFond THOUGHT! not one of all that shining swarmWill breathe on thee with life-enkindling breath,Till when, like strangers shelt'ring from a storm,Hope and Despair meet in the porch of Death!Yet still thou haunt'st me; and though well I see,She is not thou, and only thou art she,Still, still as though some dear embodied Good,Some living Love before my eyes there stoodWith answering look a ready ear to lend,I mourn to thee and say, `Ah! loveliest Friend!That this the meed of all my toils might b...
A Divine Mistress
In Natures pieces still I seeSome error, that might mended be;Something my wish could still remove,Alter or add; but my fair loveWas framd by hands far more divineFor she hath evry beauteous line;Yet I had been far happier,Had Nature, that made me, made her.Then likeness might, that love creates,Have made her love what now she hates;Yet, I confess, I cannot spareFrom her just shape the smallest hair;Nor need I beg from all the storePf heaven for her one beauty more.She hath too much divinity for me;Ye gods, teach her some more humanity.
Thomas Carew
Soft As A Cloud Is Yon Blue Ridge
Soft as a cloud is yon blue Ridge, the MereSeems firm as solid crystal, breathless, clear,And motionless; and, to the gazer's eye,Deeper than ocean, in the immensityOf its vague mountains and unreal sky!But, from the process in that still retreat,Turn to minuter changes at our feet;Observe how dewy Twilight has withdrawnThe crowd of daisies from the shaven lawn,And has restored to view its tender green,That, while the sun rode high, was lost beneath their dazzling sheen.An emblem this of what the sober HourCan do for minds disposed to feel its power!Thus oft, when we in vain have wished awayThe petty pleasures of the garish day,Meek eve shuts up the whole usurping host(Unbashful dwarfs each glittering at his post)And leaves the dise...