FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49  
50   51   52   >>  
eds Give play to fine, heroic blood!-- That hid from light, and shut from weeds, The rose is fairer in its bud Than in the blossom that succeeds! He is the helpless slave who must; And she enfranchised who may sit Unblamed above the din and dust, Where stronger hands and coarser wit Strive equally for crown and crust. So ran her thought, and broader yet, Who scanned her own by Philip's pace; And never did the wife forget Her grateful tribute for the grace That charged her with so sweet a debt. So ran her thought; and in her breast Her wifely pride to pity grew, That Philip, by his Lord's behest-- To duty and to nature true-- Must do his bravest and his best. Through winter's cold and summer's heat, Where all might praise and all might blame, And thus be topic of the street, And see his fair and honest name A football, kicked by careless feet. She loved her creed, and doubting not She read it well from Nature's scroll, She found no line or word to blot; But, from her woman's modest soul, Thanked her Creator for her lot. VIII. He who, upon an Alpine peak, Stands, when the sunrise lifts the East, And gilds the crown and lights the cheek Of largest monarch down to least, Of all the summits cold and bleak, Finds sadly that it brings no boon For all his long and toilsome leagues, And chill at once and weary soon, Rests from his fevers and fatigues, And waits the recompense of noon, For then the valleys, near and far, The hillsides, fretted by the vine, The glacier-drift and torrent-scar Whose restless waters shoot and shine, And many a tarn, that like a star Trembles and flames with stress of light, And many a hamlet and chalet That dots with brown, or paints with white, The landscape quivering in the day, With beauty all his toil requite. Mountains, from mountain altitudes Are only hills, as bleak and bare; And he whose daring step intrudes Upon their grandeur, and the rare Cold light or gloom that o'er them broods, Finds that with even brow to stand Among the heights that bade him climb, Is loss of all that made them grand, While all of lovely and sublime Looks up to him from lake and land. Great men are few, and stand apart; And seem divinest when remote. From brain to brain, and heart to heart,
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49  
50   51   52   >>  



Top keywords:

thought

 

Philip

 
stress
 

glacier

 

hamlet

 

fretted

 

torrent

 

waters

 

Trembles

 

restless


flames
 

toilsome

 

leagues

 

brings

 

monarch

 

largest

 

summits

 

valleys

 

recompense

 

chalet


fevers

 

fatigues

 

hillsides

 

heights

 

broods

 

lovely

 

sublime

 

divinest

 

remote

 
beauty

requite

 
Mountains
 

altitudes

 

mountain

 

paints

 

landscape

 

quivering

 

intrudes

 

grandeur

 

daring


scanned

 

broader

 

coarser

 

Strive

 

equally

 

forget

 

wifely

 
breast
 

tribute

 

grateful