FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   >>  
NO ANSWER. You tell me not, green multitude of leaves, Mingling and whirling with the willful breeze, Nor you, bright grasses, trembling blade to blade, What meaneth June, to hap us every year? The spirit of the flowers is watching now, As winking in the sun they suck the dew, The thickets parley with the splendid fields-- What meaneth June, to hap us every year? Up where the brook laps round the shining flags, And tinkling foam bells pass the weedy shore, And where the willow swings above the trout-- What meaneth June, to hap us every year? The clouds hold knowledge in their snowy peaks, They hide it in their moving fleecy folds, They share it with the sunset's golden isles-- What meaneth June, to hap us every year? Fullness and sweetness, and the power of life, Must I in ignorance remain alone, And yield the quest of speech for certain proof? What meaneth June, to hap us every year? Sweetness and beauty, and the power of life, Is it creation's anthem--parts for all? Is this the knowledge--will you answer me What meaneth June, to hap us every year? ON THE HILLTOP. "By the margent of the sea I would build myself a home." Not by the margent of the sea, But on the hilltop I would be, My little house a mossy den, Between me and the world of men. Beside me dips a wide ravine, Covered with a flowery screen; Far round me rise a band of hills, Whose voices reach me by their rills, Or deep susurrus of the wood, That stands in stately brotherhood, Upholding one vast web of green, Whereunder foot has never been-- The pine and elm, the birch and oak-- And thus their voices me invoke: "If you would on the hilltop be, We cannot share your misery; Cease, cease this moaning for the Past: The law of grief can never last." When springtime brings anemones, Upon the sod I take my ease, Or search for Arethusa's pink, Along the torrent's ragged brink; Or in the tinted April hours I watch the curtain of the showers That fall beneath a lurking cloud, Which for a moment throws a shroud On the sun's arrows in the west, Till it blaze up a golden crest. The young moon bends her crescent horn Against the lingering summer morn; Then, riding down the starry sky, She follows me till night goes by. And when the dawn breaks on yon town, I think the sl
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   >>  



Top keywords:

meaneth

 

golden

 

knowledge

 

margent

 

voices

 
hilltop
 

misery

 

invoke

 

moaning

 

springtime


brings
 

anemones

 

stands

 

stately

 

brotherhood

 

susurrus

 

Upholding

 
breaks
 

Whereunder

 

arrows


shroud

 

moment

 

throws

 

Against

 

lingering

 

summer

 
crescent
 
riding
 

lurking

 
torrent

Arethusa

 

search

 

ragged

 
showers
 

starry

 

beneath

 

curtain

 

tinted

 
ravine
 

willow


swings

 

whirling

 

tinkling

 

clouds

 

fleecy

 

sunset

 
multitude
 
moving
 

leaves

 

Mingling