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Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

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  • #16
    Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

    The Future by Matthew Arnold
    A wanderer is man from his birth.
    He was born in a ship
    On the breast of the river of Time;
    Brimming with wonder and joy
    He spreads out his arms to the light,
    Rivets his gaze on the banks of the stream.

    As what he sees is, so have his thoughts been.
    Whether he wakes,
    Where the snowy mountainous pass,
    Echoing the screams of the eagles,
    Hems in its gorges the bed
    Of the new-born clear-flowing stream;
    Whether he first sees light
    Where the river in gleaming rings
    Sluggishly winds through the plain;
    Whether in sound of the swallowing sea—
    As is the world on the banks,
    So is the mind of the man.

    Vainly does each, as he glides,
    Fable and dream
    Of the lands which the river of Time
    Had left ere he woke on its breast,
    Or shall reach when his eyes have been closed.
    Only the tract where he sails
    He wots of; only the thoughts,
    Raised by the objects he passes, are his.

    Who can see the green earth any more
    As she was by the sources of Time?
    Who imagines her fields as they lay
    In the sunshine, unworn by the plough?
    Who thinks as they thought,
    The tribes who then roamed on her breast,
    Her vigorous, primitive sons?

    What girl
    Now reads in her bosom as clear
    As Rebekah read, when she sate
    At eve by the palm-shaded well?
    Who guards in her breast
    As deep, as pellucid a spring
    Of feeling, as tranquil, as sure?

    What bard,
    At the height of his vision, can deem
    Of God, of the world, of the soul,
    With a plainness as near,
    As flashing as Moses felt
    When he lay in the night by his flock
    On the starlit Arabian waste?
    Can rise and obey
    The beck of the Spirit like him?

    This tract which the river of Time
    Now flows through with us, is the plain.
    Gone is the calm of its earlier shore.
    Bordered by cities and hoarse
    With a thousand cries is its stream.
    And we on its breast, our minds
    Are confused as the cries which we hear,
    Changing and shot as the sights which we see.

    And we say that repose has fled
    For ever the course of the river of Time.
    That cities will crowd to its edge
    In a blacker, incessanter line;
    That the din will be more on its banks,
    Denser the trade on its stream,
    Flatter the plain where it flows,
    Fiercer the sun overhead;
    That never will those on its breast
    See an ennobling sight,
    Drink of the feeling of quiet again.

    But what was before us we know not,
    And we know not what shall succeed.

    Haply, the river of Time—
    As it grows, as the towns on its marge
    Fling their wavering lights
    On a wider, statlier stream—
    May acquire, if not the calm
    Of its early mountainous shore,
    Yet a solemn peace of its own.

    And the width of the waters, the hush
    Of the grey expanse where he floats,
    Freshening its current and spotted with foam
    As it draws to the Ocean, amy strike
    Peace to the soul of the man on its breast—
    As the pale waste widens around him,
    As the banks fade dimmer away,
    As the stars come out, and the night-wind
    Brings up the stream
    Murmurs and scents of the infinite sea.
    اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
    اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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    • #17
      Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

      Hayeswater by Matthew Arnold
      A region desolate and wild.
      Black, chafing water: and afloat,
      And lonely as a truant child
      In a waste wood, a single boat:
      No mast, no sails are set thereon;
      It moves, but never moveth on:
      And welters like a human thing
      Amid the wild waves weltering.

      Behind, a buried vale doth sleep,
      Far down the torrent cleaves its way:
      In front the dumb rock rises steep,
      A fretted wall of blue and grey;
      Of shooting cliff and crumbled stone
      With many a wild weed overgrown:
      All else, black water: and afloat,
      One rood from shore, that single boat.
      اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
      اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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      • #18
        Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

        The Pagan World by Matthew Arnold
        In his cool hall, with haggard eyes,
        The Roman noble lay;
        He drove abroad, in furious guise,
        Along the Appian way.

        He made a feast, drank fierce and fast,
        And crowned his hair with flowers—
        No easier nor no quicker passed
        The impracticable hours.

        The brooding East with awe beheld
        Her impious younger world.
        The Roman tempest swelled and swelled,
        And on her head was hurled.

        The East bowed low before the blast
        In patient, deep disdain;
        She let the legions thunder past,
        And plunged in thought again.

        So well she mused, a morning broke
        Across her spirit grey;
        A conquering, new-born joy awoke,
        And filled her life with day.

        "Poor world," she cried, "so deep accurst
        That runn'st from pole to pole
        To seek a draught to slake thy thirst—
        Go, seek it in thy soul!"

        She heard it, the victorious West,
        In crown and sword arrayed!
        She felt the void which mined her breast,
        She shivered and obeyed.

        She veiled her eagles, snapped her sword,
        And laid her sceptre down;
        Her stately purple she abhorred,
        And her imperial crown.

        She broke her flutes, she stopped her sports,
        Her artists could not please;
        She tore her books, she shut her courts,
        She fled her palaces;

        Lust of the eye and pride of life
        She left it all behind,
        And hurried, torn with inward strife,
        The wilderness to find.

        Tears washed the trouble from her face!
        She changed into a child!
        Mid weeds and wrecks she stood—a place
        Of ruin—but she smiled!
        اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
        اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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        • #19
          Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

          Philomela by Matthew Arnold
          Hark! ah, the nightingale—
          The tawny-throated!
          Hark, from that moonlit cedar what a burst!
          What triumph! hark!—what pain!

          O wanderer from a Grecian shore,
          Still, after many years, in distant lands,
          Still nourishing in thy bewildered brain
          That wild, unquenched, deep-sunken, old-world pain—
          Say, will it never heal?
          And can this fragrant lawn
          With its cool trees, and night,
          And the sweet tranquil Thames,
          And moonshine, and the dew,
          To thy racked heart and brain
          Afford no balm?

          Dost thou tonight behold,
          Here, through the moonlight on this English grass,
          The unfriendly palace in the Thracian wild?
          Dost thou again peruse
          With hot cheeks and seared eyes
          The too clear web, and thy dumb sister's shame?
          Dost thou once more assay
          Thy flight, and feel come over thee,
          Poor fugitive, the feathery change
          Once more, and once more seem to make resound
          With love and hate, triumph and agony,
          Lone Daulis, and the high Cephissian vale?
          Listen, Eugenia—
          How thick the bursts come crowding through the leaves!
          Again—thou hearest?
          Eternal passion!
          Eternal pain!
          اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
          اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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          • #20
            Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

            To Marguerite by Matthew Arnold
            Yes! in the sea of life enisled,
            With echoing straits between us thrown,
            Dotting the shoreless watery wild,
            We mortal millions live alone.
            The islands feel the enclasping flow,
            And then their endless bounds they know.

            But when the moon their hollows lights,
            And they are swept by balms of spring,
            And in their glens, on starry nights,
            The nightingales divinely sing;
            And lovely notes, from shore to shore,
            Across the sounds and channels pour --

            Oh! then a longing like despair
            Is to their farthest caverns sent;
            For surely once, they feel, we were
            Parts of a single continent!
            Now round us spreads the watery plain --
            Oh, might our marges meet again!

            Who ordered, that their longing's fire
            Should be, as soon as kindled, cooled?
            Who renders vain their deep desire? --
            A god, a god their severance ruled!
            And bade betwixt their shores to be
            The unplumbed, salt, estranging sea.
            اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
            اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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            • #21
              Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

              Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse by Matthew Arnold
              Through Alpine meadows soft-suffused
              With rain, where thick the crocus blows,
              Past the dark forges long disused,
              The mule-track from Saint Laurent goes.
              The bridge is cross'd, and slow we ride,
              Through forest, up the mountain-side.

              The autumnal evening darkens round,
              The wind is up, and drives the rain;
              While, hark! far down, with strangled sound
              Doth the Dead Guier's stream complain,
              Where that wet smoke, among the woods,
              Over his boiling cauldron broods.

              Swift rush the spectral vapours white
              Past limestone scars with ragged pines,
              Showing--then blotting from our sight!--
              Halt--through the cloud-drift something shines!
              High in the valley, wet and drear,
              The huts of Courrerie appear.

              Strike leftward! cries our guide; and higher
              Mounts up the stony forest-way.
              At last the encircling trees retire;
              Look! through the showery twilight grey
              What pointed roofs are these advance?--
              A palace of the Kings of France?

              Approach, for what we seek is here!
              Alight, and sparely sup, and wait
              For rest in this outbuilding near;
              Then cross the sward and reach that gate.
              Knock; pass the wicket! Thou art come
              To the Carthusians' world-famed home.

              The silent courts, where night and day
              Into their stone-carved basins cold
              The splashing icy fountains play--
              The humid corridors behold!
              Where, ghostlike in the deepening night,
              Cowl'd forms brush by in gleaming white.

              The chapel, where no organ's peal
              Invests the stern and naked prayer--
              With penitential cries they kneel
              And wrestle; rising then, with bare
              And white uplifted faces stand,
              Passing the Host from hand to hand;

              Each takes, and then his visage wan
              Is buried in his cowl once more.
              The cells!--the suffering Son of Man
              Upon the wall--the knee-worn floor--
              And where they sleep, that wooden bed,
              Which shall their coffin be, when dead!

              The library, where tract and tome
              Not to feed priestly pride are there,
              To hymn the conquering march of Rome,
              Nor yet to amuse, as ours are!
              They paint of souls the inner strife,
              Their drops of blood, their death in life.

              The garden, overgrown--yet mild,
              See, fragrant herbs are flowering there!
              Strong children of the Alpine wild
              Whose culture is the brethren's care;
              Of human tasks their only one,
              And cheerful works beneath the sun.

              Those halls, too, destined to contain
              Each its own pilgrim-host of old,
              From England, Germany, or Spain--
              All are before me! I behold
              The House, the Brotherhood austere!
              --And what am I, that I am here?

              For rigorous teachers seized my youth,
              And purged its faith, and trimm'd its fire,
              Show'd me the high, white star of Truth,
              There bade me gaze, and there aspire.

              Even now their whispers pierce the gloom:
              What dost thou in this living tomb?

              Forgive me, masters of the mind!
              At whose behest I long ago
              So much unlearnt, so much resign'd--
              I come not here to be your foe!
              I seek these anchorites, not in ruth,
              To curse and to deny your truth;

              Not as their friend, or child, I speak!
              But as, on some far northern strand,
              Thinking of his own Gods, a Greek
              In pity and mournful awe might stand
              Before some fallen Runic stone--
              For both were faiths, and both are gone.

              Wandering between two worlds, one dead,
              The other powerless to be born,
              With nowhere yet to rest my head,
              Like these, on earth I wait forlorn.
              Their faith, my tears, the world deride--
              I come to shed them at their side.

              Oh, hide me in your gloom profound,
              Ye solemn seats of holy pain!
              Take me, cowl'd forms, and fence me round,
              Till I possess my soul again;
              Till free my thoughts before me roll,
              Not chafed by hourly false control!

              For the world cries your faith is now
              But a dead time's exploded dream;
              My melancholy, sciolists say,
              Is a pass'd mode, an outworn theme--
              As if the world had ever had
              A faith, or sciolists been sad!

              Ah, if it be pass'd, take away,
              At least, the restlessness, the pain;
              Be man henceforth no more a prey
              To these out-dated stings again!
              The nobleness of grief is gone
              Ah, leave us not the fret alone!

              But--if you cannot give us ease--
              Last of the race of them who grieve
              Here leave us to die out with these
              Last of the people who believe!
              Silent, while years engrave the brow;
              Silent--the best are silent now.

              Achilles ponders in his tent,
              The kings of modern thought are dumb,
              Silent they are though not content,
              And wait to see the future come.
              They have the grief men had of yore,
              But they contend and cry no more.

              Our fathers water'd with their tears
              This sea of time whereon we sail,
              Their voices were in all men's ears
              We pass'd within their puissant hail.
              Still the same ocean round us raves,
              But we stand mute, and watch the waves.

              For what avail'd it, all the noise
              And outcry of the former men?--
              Say, have their sons achieved more joys,
              Say, is life lighter now than then?
              The sufferers died, they left their pain--
              The pangs which tortured them remain.

              What helps it now, that Byron bore,
              With haughty scorn which mock'd the smart,
              Through Europe to the Жtolian shore
              The pageant of his bleeding heart?
              That thousands counted every groan,
              And Europe made his woe her own?

              What boots it, Shelley! that the breeze
              Carried thy lovely wail away,
              Musical through Italian trees
              Which fringe thy soft blue Spezzian bay?
              Inheritors of thy distress
              Have restless hearts one throb the less?

              Or are we easier, to have read,
              O Obermann! the sad, stern page,
              Which tells us how thou hidd'st thy head
              From the fierce tempest of thine age
              In the lone brakes of Fontainebleau,
              Or chalets near the Alpine snow?

              Ye slumber in your silent grave!--
              The world, which for an idle day
              Grace to your mood of sadness gave,
              Long since hath flung her weeds away.
              The eternal trifler breaks your spell;
              But we--we learned your lore too well!

              Years hence, perhaps, may dawn an age,
              More fortunate, alas! than we,
              Which without hardness will be sage,
              And gay without frivolity.
              Sons of the world, oh, speed those years;
              But, while we wait, allow our tears!

              Allow them! We admire with awe
              The exulting thunder of your race;
              You give the universe your law,
              You triumph over time and space!
              Your pride of life, your tireless powers,
              We laud them, but they are not ours.

              We are like children rear'd in shade
              Beneath some old-world abbey wall,
              Forgotten in a forest-glade,
              And secret from the eyes of all.
              Deep, deep the greenwood round them waves,
              Their abbey, and its close of graves!

              But, where the road runs near the stream,
              Oft through the trees they catch a glance
              Of passing troops in the sun's beam--
              Pennon, and plume, and flashing lance!
              Forth to the world those soldiers fare,
              To life, to cities, and to war!

              And through the wood, another way,
              Faint bugle-notes from far are borne,
              Where hunters gather, staghounds bay,
              Round some fair forest-lodge at morn.
              Gay dames are there, in sylvan green;
              Laughter and cries--those notes between!
              The banners flashing through the trees

              Make their blood dance and chain their eyes;
              That bugle-music on the breeze
              Arrests them with a charm'd surprise.
              Banner by turns and bugle woo:
              Ye shy recluses, follow too!
              O children, what do ye reply?--

              'Action and pleasure, will ye roam
              Through these secluded dells to cry
              And call us?--but too late ye come!
              Too late for us your call ye blow,
              Whose bent was taken long ago.

              'Long since we pace this shadow'd nave;
              We watch those yellow tapers shine,
              Emblems of hope over the grave,
              In the high altar's depth divine;
              The organ carries to our ear
              Its accents of another sphere.

              'Fenced early in this cloistral round
              Of reverie, of shade, of prayer,
              How should we grow in other ground?
              How can we flower in foreign air?
              --Pass, banners, pass, and bugles, cease;
              And leave our desert to its peace!'
              اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
              اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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              • #22
                Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                The Song Of Empedocles by Matthew Arnold
                And you, ye stars,
                Who slowly begin to marshal,
                As of old, in the fields of heaven,
                Your distant, melancholy lines!
                Have you, too, survived yourselves?
                Are you, too, what I fear to become?
                You, too, once lived;
                You too moved joyfully
                Among august companions,
                In an older world, peopled by Gods,
                In a mightier order,
                The radiant, rejoicing, intelligent Sons of Heaven.
                But now, ye kindle
                Your lonely, cold-shining lights,
                Unwilling lingerers
                In the heavenly wilderness,
                For a younger, ignoble world;
                And renew, by necessity,
                Night after night your courses,
                In echoing, unneared silence,
                Above a race you know not—
                Uncaring and undelighted,
                Without friend and without home;
                Weary like us, though not
                Weary with our weariness.
                اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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                • #23
                  Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                  The Buried Life by Matthew Arnold
                  Light flows our war of mocking words, and yet,
                  Behold, with tears mine eyes are wet!
                  I feel a nameless sadness o'er me roll.
                  Yes, yes, we know that we can jest,
                  We know, we know that we can smile!
                  But there's a something in this breast,
                  To which thy light words bring no rest,
                  And thy gay smiles no anodyne.
                  Give me thy hand, and hush awhile,
                  And turn those limpid eyes on mine,
                  And let me read there, love! thy inmost soul.

                  Alas! is even love too weak
                  To unlock the heart, and let it speak?
                  Are even lovers powerless to reveal
                  To one another what indeed they feel?
                  I knew the mass of men conceal'd
                  Their thoughts, for fear that if reveal'd
                  They would by other men be met
                  With blank indifference, or with blame reproved;
                  I knew they lived and moved
                  Trick'd in disguises, alien to the rest
                  Of men, and alien to themselves--and yet
                  The same heart beats in every human breast!

                  But we, my love!--doth a like spell benumb
                  Our hearts, our voices?--must we too be dumb?

                  Ah! well for us, if even we,
                  Even for a moment, can get free
                  Our heart, and have our lips unchain'd;
                  For that which seals them hath been deep-ordain'd!

                  Fate, which foresaw
                  How frivolous a baby man would be--
                  By what distractions he would be possess'd,
                  How he would pour himself in every strife,
                  And well-nigh change his own identity--
                  That it might keep from his capricious play
                  His genuine self, and force him to obey
                  Even in his own despite his being's law,
                  Bade through the deep recesses of our breast
                  The unregarded river of our life
                  Pursue with indiscernible flow its way;
                  And that we should not see
                  The buried stream, and seem to be
                  Eddying at large in blind uncertainty,
                  Though driving on with it eternally.

                  But often, in the world's most crowded streets,
                  But often, in the din of strife,
                  There rises an unspeakable desire
                  After the knowledge of our buried life;
                  A thirst to spend our fire and restless force
                  In tracking out our true, original course;
                  A longing to inquire
                  Into the mystery of this heart which beats
                  So wild, so deep in us--to know
                  Whence our lives come and where they go.
                  And many a man in his own breast then delves,
                  But deep enough, alas! none ever mines.
                  And we have been on many thousand lines,
                  And we have shown, on each, spirit and power;
                  But hardly have we, for one little hour,
                  Been on our own line, have we been ourselves--
                  Hardly had skill to utter one of all
                  The nameless feelings that course through our breast,
                  But they course on for ever unexpress'd.
                  And long we try in vain to speak and act
                  Our hidden self, and what we say and do
                  Is eloquent, is well--but 't#is not true!
                  And then we will no more be rack'd
                  With inward striving, and demand
                  Of all the thousand nothings of the hour
                  Their stupefying power;
                  Ah yes, and they benumb us at our call!
                  Yet still, from time to time, vague and forlorn,
                  From the soul's subterranean depth upborne
                  As from an infinitely distant land,
                  Come airs, and floating echoes, and convey
                  A melancholy into all our day.
                  Only--but this is rare--
                  When a belov{'e}d hand is laid in ours,
                  When, jaded with the rush and glare
                  Of the interminable hours,
                  Our eyes can in another's eyes read clear,
                  When our world-deafen'd ear
                  Is by the tones of a loved voice caress'd--
                  A bolt is shot back somewhere in our breast,
                  And a lost pulse of feeling stirs again.
                  The eye sinks inward, and the heart lies plain,
                  And what we mean, we say, and what we would, we know.
                  A man becomes aware of his life's flow,
                  And hears its winding murmur; and he sees
                  The meadows where it glides, the sun, the breeze.

                  And there arrives a lull in the hot race
                  Wherein he doth for ever chase
                  That flying and elusive shadow, rest.
                  An air of coolness plays upon his face,
                  And an unwonted calm pervades his breast.
                  And then he thinks he knows
                  The hills where his life rose,
                  And the sea where it goes.
                  اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                  اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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                  • #24
                    Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                    Youth and Calm by Matthew Arnold
                    'Tis death! and peace, indeed, is here,
                    And ease from shame, and rest from fear.
                    There's nothing can dismarble now
                    The smoothness of that limpid brow.
                    But is a calm like this, in truth,
                    The crowning end of life and youth,
                    And when this boon rewards the dead,
                    Are all debts paid, has all been said?
                    And is the heart of youth so light,
                    Its step so firm, its eye so bright,
                    Because on its hot brow there blows
                    A wind of promise and repose
                    From the far grave, to which it goes;
                    Because it hath the hope to come,
                    One day, to harbour in the tomb?
                    Ah no, the bliss youth dreams is one
                    For daylight, for the cheerful sun,
                    For feeling nerves and living breath--
                    Youth dreams a bliss on this side death.
                    It dreams a rest, if not more deep,
                    More grateful than this marble sleep;
                    It hears a voice within it tell:
                    Calm's not life's crown, though calm is well.
                    'Tis all perhaps which man acquires,
                    But 'tis not what our youth desires.
                    اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                    اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                      Morality by Matthew Arnold
                      We cannot kindle when we will
                      The fire which in the heart resides;
                      The spirit bloweth and is still,
                      In mystery our soul abides.
                      But tasks in hours of insight will'd
                      Can be through hours of gloom fulfill'd.

                      With aching hands and bleeding feet
                      We dig and heap, lay stone on stone;
                      We bear the burden and the heat
                      Of the long day, and wish 'twere done.
                      Not till the hours of light return,
                      All we have built do we discern.

                      Then, when the clouds are off the soul,
                      When thou dost bask in Nature's eye,
                      Ask, how she view'd thy self-control,
                      Thy struggling, task'd morality--
                      Nature, whose free, light, cheerful air,
                      Oft made thee, in thy gloom, despair.

                      And she, whose censure thou dost dread,
                      Whose eye thou wast afraid to seek,
                      See, on her face a glow is spread,
                      A strong emotion on her cheek!
                      'Ah, child!' she cries, 'that strife divine,
                      Whence was it, for it is not mine?

                      'There is no effort on my brow--
                      I do not strive, I do not weep;
                      I rush with the swift spheres and glow
                      In joy, and when I will, I sleep.
                      Yet that severe, that earnest air,
                      I saw, I felt it once--but where?

                      'I knew not yet the gauge of time,
                      Nor wore the manacles of space;
                      I felt it in some other clime,
                      I saw it in some other place.
                      'Twas when the heavenly house I trod,
                      And lay upon the breast of God.'
                      اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                      اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                        Worldly Place by Matthew Arnold
                        Even in a palace, life may be led well!
                        So spake the imperial sage, purest of men,
                        Marcus Aurelius. But the stifling den
                        Of common life, where, crowded up pell-mell,

                        Our freedom for a little bread we sell,
                        And drudge under some foolish master's ken
                        Who rates us if we peer outside our pen--
                        Match'd with a palace, is not this a hell?

                        Even in a palace! On his truth sincere,
                        Who spoke these words, no shadow ever came;
                        And when my ill-school'd spirit is aflame

                        Some nobler, ampler stage of life to win,
                        I'll stop, and say: 'There were no succour here!
                        The aids to noble life are all within.'
                        اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                        اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                          Buried Life, The by Matthew Arnold
                          Light flows our war of mocking words, and yet,
                          Behold, with tears mine eyes are wet!
                          I feel a nameless sadness o'er me roll.
                          Yes, yes, we know that we can jest,
                          We know, we know that we can smile!
                          But there's a something in this breast,
                          To which thy light words bring no rest,
                          And thy gay smiles no anodyne.
                          Give me thy hand, and hush awhile,
                          And turn those limpid eyes on mine,
                          And let me read there, love! thy inmost soul.

                          Alas! is even love too weak
                          To unlock the heart, and let it speak?
                          Are even lovers powerless to reveal
                          To one another what indeed they feel?
                          I knew the mass of men conceal'd
                          Their thoughts, for fear that if reveal'd
                          They would by other men be met
                          With blank indifference, or with blame reproved;
                          I knew they lived and moved
                          Trick'd in disguises, alien to the rest
                          Of men, and alien to themselves--and yet
                          The same heart beats in every human breast!

                          But we, my love!--doth a like spell benumb
                          Our hearts, our voices?--must we too be dumb?

                          Ah! well for us, if even we,
                          Even for a moment, can get free
                          Our heart, and have our lips unchain'd;
                          For that which seals them hath been deep-ordain'd!

                          Fate, which foresaw
                          How frivolous a baby man would be--
                          By what distractions he would be possess'd,
                          How he would pour himself in every strife,
                          And well-nigh change his own identity--
                          That it might keep from his capricious play
                          His genuine self, and force him to obey
                          Even in his own despite his being's law,
                          Bade through the deep recesses of our breast
                          The unregarded river of our life
                          Pursue with indiscernible flow its way;
                          And that we should not see
                          The buried stream, and seem to be
                          Eddying at large in blind uncertainty,
                          Though driving on with it eternally.

                          But often, in the world's most crowded streets,
                          But often, in the din of strife,
                          There rises an unspeakable desire
                          After the knowledge of our buried life;
                          A thirst to spend our fire and restless force
                          In tracking out our true, original course;
                          A longing to inquire
                          Into the mystery of this heart which beats
                          So wild, so deep in us--to know
                          Whence our lives come and where they go.
                          And many a man in his own breast then delves,
                          But deep enough, alas! none ever mines.
                          And we have been on many thousand lines,
                          And we have shown, on each, spirit and power;
                          But hardly have we, for one little hour,
                          Been on our own line, have we been ourselves--
                          Hardly had skill to utter one of all
                          The nameless feelings that course through our breast,
                          But they course on for ever unexpress'd.
                          And long we try in vain to speak and act
                          Our hidden self, and what we say and do
                          Is eloquent, is well--but 't#is not true!
                          And then we will no more be rack'd
                          With inward striving, and demand
                          Of all the thousand nothings of the hour
                          Their stupefying power;
                          Ah yes, and they benumb us at our call!
                          Yet still, from time to time, vague and forlorn,
                          From the soul's subterranean depth upborne
                          As from an infinitely distant land,
                          Come airs, and floating echoes, and convey
                          A melancholy into all our day.
                          Only--but this is rare--
                          When a belov{'e}d hand is laid in ours,
                          When, jaded with the rush and glare
                          Of the interminable hours,
                          Our eyes can in another's eyes read clear,
                          When our world-deafen'd ear
                          Is by the tones of a loved voice caress'd--
                          A bolt is shot back somewhere in our breast,
                          And a lost pulse of feeling stirs again.
                          The eye sinks inward, and the heart lies plain,
                          And what we mean, we say, and what we would, we know.
                          A man becomes aware of his life's flow,
                          And hears its winding murmur; and he sees
                          The meadows where it glides, the sun, the breeze.

                          And there arrives a lull in the hot race
                          Wherein he doth for ever chase
                          That flying and elusive shadow, rest.
                          An air of coolness plays upon his face,
                          And an unwonted calm pervades his breast.
                          And then he thinks he knows
                          The hills where his life rose,
                          And the sea where it goes.
                          اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                          اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                            Self-Dependence by Matthew Arnold
                            Weary of myself, and sick of asking
                            What I am, and what I ought to be,
                            At this vessel's prow I stand, which bears me
                            Forwards, forwards, o'er the starlit sea.

                            And a look of passionate desire
                            O'er the sea and to the stars I send:
                            'Ye who from my childhood up have calm'd me,
                            Calm me, ah, compose me to the end!

                            'Ah, once more,' I cried, 'ye stars, ye waters,
                            On my heart your mighty charm renew;
                            Still, still let me, as I gaze upon you,
                            Feel my soul becoming vast like you!'

                            From the intense, clear, star-sown vault of heaven,
                            Over the lit sea's unquiet way,
                            In the rustling night-air came the answer:
                            'Wouldst thou be as these are? Live as they.

                            'Unaffrighted by the silence round them,
                            Undistracted by the sights they see,
                            These demand not that the things without them
                            Yield them love, amusement, sympathy.

                            'And with joy the stars perform their shining,
                            And the sea its long moon-silver'd roll;
                            For self-poised they live, nor pine with noting
                            All the fever of some differing soul.

                            'Bounded by themselves, and unregardful
                            In what state God's other works may be,
                            In their own tasks all their powers pouring,
                            These attain the mighty life you see.'

                            O air-born voice! long since, severely clear,
                            A cry like thine in mine own heart I hear:
                            'Resolve to be thyself; and know that he,
                            Who finds himself, loses his misery!'
                            اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                            اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                              Rugby Chapel by Matthew Arnold
                              Coldly, sadly descends
                              The autumn-evening. The field
                              Strewn with its dank yellow drifts
                              Of wither'd leaves, and the elms,
                              Fade into dimness apace,
                              Silent;--hardly a shout
                              From a few boys late at their play!
                              The lights come out in the street,
                              In the school-room windows;--but cold,
                              Solemn, unlighted, austere,
                              Through the gathering darkness, arise
                              The chapel-walls, in whose bound
                              Thou, my father! art laid.

                              There thou dost lie, in the gloom
                              Of the autumn evening. But ah!
                              That word, gloom, to my mind
                              Brings thee back, in the light
                              Of thy radiant vigour, again;
                              In the gloom of November we pass'd
                              Days not dark at thy side;
                              Seasons impair'd not the ray
                              Of thy buoyant cheerfulness clear.
                              Such thou wast! and I stand
                              In the autumn evening, and think
                              Of bygone autumns with thee.

                              Fifteen years have gone round
                              Since thou arosest to tread,
                              In the summer-morning, the road
                              Of death, at a call unforeseen,
                              Sudden. For fifteen years,
                              We who till then in thy shade
                              Rested as under the boughs
                              Of a mighty oak, have endured
                              Sunshine and rain as we might,
                              Bare, unshaded, alone,
                              Lacking the shelter of thee.

                              O strong soul, by what shore
                              Tarriest thou now? For that force,
                              Surely, has not been left vain!
                              Somewhere, surely afar,
                              In the sounding labour-house vast
                              Of being, is practised that strength,
                              Zealous, beneficent, firm!

                              Yes, in some far-shining sphere,
                              Conscious or not of the past,
                              Still thou performest the word
                              Of the Spirit in whom thou dost live--
                              Prompt, unwearied, as here!
                              Still thou upraisest with zeal
                              The humble good from the ground,
                              Sternly repressest the bad!
                              Still, like a trumpet, dost rouse
                              Those who with half-open eyes
                              Tread the border-land dim
                              'Twixt vice and virtue; reviv'st,
                              Succourest!--this was thy work,
                              This was thy life upon earth.

                              What is the course of the life
                              Of mortal men on the earth?--
                              Most men eddy about
                              Here and there--eat and drink,
                              Chatter and love and hate,
                              Gather and squander, are raised
                              Aloft, are hurl'd in the dust,
                              Striving blindly, achieving
                              Nothing; and then they die--
                              Perish;--and no one asks
                              Who or what they have been,
                              More than he asks what waves,
                              In the moonlit solitudes mild
                              Of the midmost Ocean, have swell'd,
                              Foam'd for a moment, and gone.

                              And there are some, whom a thirst
                              Ardent, unquenchable, fires,
                              Not with the crowd to be spent,
                              Not without aim to go round
                              In an eddy of purposeless dust,
                              Effort unmeaning and vain.
                              Ah yes! some of us strive
                              Not without action to die
                              Fruitless, but something to snatch
                              From dull oblivion, nor all
                              Glut the devouring grave!
                              We, we have chosen our path--
                              Path to a clear-purposed goal,
                              Path of advance!--but it leads
                              A long, steep journey, through sunk
                              Gorges, o'er mountains in snow.
                              Cheerful, with friends, we set forth--
                              Then on the height, comes the storm.
                              Thunder crashes from rock
                              To rock, the cataracts reply,
                              Lightnings dazzle our eyes.
                              Roaring torrents have breach'd
                              The track, the stream-bed descends
                              In the place where the wayfarer once
                              Planted his footstep--the spray
                              Boils o'er its borders! aloft
                              The unseen snow-beds dislodge
                              Their hanging ruin; alas,
                              Havoc is made in our train!
                              Friends, who set forth at our side,
                              Falter, are lost in the storm.
                              We, we only are left!
                              With frowning foreheads, with lips
                              Sternly compress'd, we strain on,
                              On--and at nightfall at last
                              Come to the end of our way,
                              To the lonely inn 'mid the rocks;
                              Where the gaunt and taciturn host
                              Stands on the threshold, the wind
                              Shaking his thin white hairs--
                              Holds his lantern to scan
                              Our storm-beat figures, and asks:
                              Whom in our party we bring?
                              Whom we have left in the snow?
                              Sadly we answer: We bring
                              Only ourselves! we lost
                              Sight of the rest in the storm.
                              Hardly ourselves we fought through,
                              Stripp'd, without friends, as we are.
                              Friends, companions, and train,
                              The avalanche swept from our side.

                              But thou woulds't not alone
                              Be saved, my father! alone
                              Conquer and come to thy goal,
                              Leaving the rest in the wild.
                              We were weary, and we
                              Fearful, and we in our march
                              Fain to drop down and to die.
                              Still thou turnedst, and still
                              Beckonedst the trembler, and still
                              Gavest the weary thy hand.

                              If, in the paths of the world,
                              Stones might have wounded thy feet,
                              Toil or dejection have tried
                              Thy spirit, of that we saw
                              Nothing--to us thou wage still
                              Cheerful, and helpful, and firm!
                              Therefore to thee it was given
                              Many to save with thyself;
                              And, at the end of thy day,
                              O faithful shepherd! to come,
                              Bringing thy sheep in thy hand.

                              And through thee I believe
                              In the noble and great who are gone;
                              Pure souls honour'd and blest
                              By former ages, who else--
                              Such, so soulless, so poor,
                              Is the race of men whom I see--
                              Seem'd but a dream of the heart,
                              Seem'd but a cry of desire.
                              Yes! I believe that there lived
                              Others like thee in the past,
                              Not like the men of the crowd
                              Who all round me to-day
                              Bluster or cringe, and make life
                              Hideous, and arid, and vile;
                              But souls temper'd with fire,
                              Fervent, heroic, and good,
                              Helpers and friends of mankind.
                              Servants of God!--or sons
                              Shall I not call you? Because
                              Not as servants ye knew
                              Your Father's innermost mind,
                              His, who unwillingly sees
                              One of his little ones lost--
                              Yours is the praise, if mankind
                              Hath not as yet in its march
                              Fainted, and fallen, and died!

                              See! In the rocks of the world
                              Marches the host of mankind,
                              A feeble, wavering line.
                              Where are they tending?--A God
                              Marshall'd them, gave them their goal.
                              Ah, but the way is so long!
                              Years they have been in the wild!
                              Sore thirst plagues them, the rocks
                              Rising all round, overawe;
                              Factions divide them, their host
                              Threatens to break, to dissolve.
                              --Ah, keep, keep them combined!
                              Else, of the myriads who fill
                              That army, not one shall arrive;
                              Sole they shall stray; in the rocks
                              Stagger for ever in vain,
                              Die one by one in the waste.

                              Then, in such hour of need
                              Of your fainting, dispirited race,
                              Ye, like angels, appear,
                              Radiant with ardour divine!
                              Beacons of hope, ye appear!
                              Languor is not in your heart,
                              Weakness is not in your word,
                              Weariness not on your brow.
                              Ye alight in our van! at your voice,
                              Panic, despair, flee away.
                              Ye move through the ranks, recall
                              The stragglers, refresh the outworn,
                              Praise, re-inspire the brave!
                              Order, courage, return.
                              Eyes rekindling, and prayers,
                              Follow your steps as ye go.
                              Ye fill up the gaps in our files,
                              Strengthen the wavering line,
                              Stablish, continue our march,
                              On, to the bound of the waste,
                              On, to the City of God.
                              اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                              اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: Matthew Arnold poetry Collection

                                Thyrsis, a Monody by Matthew Arnold
                                How changed is here each spot man makes or fills!
                                In the two Hinkseys nothing keeps the same;
                                The village street its haunted mansion lacks,
                                And from the sign is gone Sibylla's name,
                                And from the roofs the twisted chimney-stacks--
                                Are ye too changed, ye hills?
                                See, 'tis no foot of unfamiliar men
                                To-night from Oxford up your pathway strays!
                                Here came I often, often, in old days--
                                Thyrsis and I; we still had Thyrsis then.

                                Runs it not here, the track by Childsworth Farm,
                                Past the high wood, to where the elm-tree crowns
                                The hill behind whose ridge the sunset flames?
                                The signal-elm, that looks on Ilsley Downs,
                                The Vale, the three lone weirs, the youthful Thames?--
                                This winter-eve is warm,
                                Humid the air! leafless, yet soft as spring,
                                The tender purple spray on copse and briers!
                                And that sweet city with her dreaming spires,
                                She needs not June for beauty's heightening,

                                Lovely all times she lies, lovely to-night!--
                                Only, methinks, some loss of habit's power
                                Befalls me wandering through this upland dim.
                                Once pass'd I blindfold here, at any hour;
                                Now seldom come I, since I came with him.
                                That single elm-tree bright
                                Against the west--I miss it! is it goner?
                                We prized it dearly; while it stood, we said,
                                Our friend, the Gipsy-Scholar, was not dead;
                                While the tree lived, he in these fields lived on.

                                Too rare, too rare, grow now my visits here,
                                But once I knew each field, each flower, each stick;
                                And with the country-folk acquaintance made
                                By barn in threshing-time, by new-built rick.
                                Here, too, our shepherd-pipes we first assay'd.
                                Ah me! this many a year
                                My pipe is lost, my shepherd's holiday!
                                Needs must I lose them, needs with heavy heart
                                Into the world and wave of men depart;
                                But Thyrsis of his own will went away.

                                It irk'd him to be here, he could not rest.
                                He loved each simple joy the country yields,
                                He loved his mates; but yet he could not keep,
                                For that a shadow lour'd on the fields,
                                Here with the shepherds and the silly sheep.
                                Some life of men unblest
                                He knew, which made him droop, and fill'd his head.
                                He went; his piping took a troubled sound
                                Of storms that rage outside our happy ground;
                                He could not wait their passing, he is dead.

                                So, some tempestuous morn in early June,
                                When the year's primal burst of bloom is o'er,
                                Before the roses and the longest day--
                                When garden-walks and all the grassy floor
                                With blossoms red and white of fallen May
                                And chestnut-flowers are strewn--
                                So have I heard the cuckoo's parting cry,
                                From the wet field, through the vext garden-trees,
                                Come with the volleying rain and tossing breeze:
                                The bloom is gone, and with the bloom go I!

                                Too quick despairer, wherefore wilt thou go?
                                Soon will the high Midsummer pomps come on,
                                Soon will the musk carnations break and swell,
                                Soon shall we have gold-dusted snapdragon,
                                Sweet-William with his homely cottage-smell,
                                And stocks in fragrant blow;
                                Roses that down the alleys shine afar,
                                And open, jasmine-muffled lattices,
                                And groups under the dreaming garden-trees,
                                And the full moon, and the white evening-star.

                                He hearkens not! light comer, he is flown!
                                What matters it? next year he will return,
                                And we shall have him in the sweet spring-days,
                                With whitening hedges, and uncrumpling fern,
                                And blue-bells trembling by the forest-ways,
                                And scent of hay new-mown.
                                But Thyrsis never more we swains shall see;
                                See him come back, and cut a smoother reed,
                                And blow a strain the world at last shall heed--
                                For Time, not Corydon, hath conquer'd thee!

                                Alack, for Corydon no rival now!--
                                But when Sicilian shepherds lost a mate,
                                Some good survivor with his flute would go,
                                Piping a ditty sad for Bion's fate;
                                And cross the unpermitted ferry's flow,
                                And relax Pluto's brow,
                                And make leap up with joy the beauteous head
                                Of Proserpine, among whose crowned hair
                                Are flowers first open'd on Sicilian air,
                                And flute his friend, like Orpheus, from the dead.

                                O easy access to the hearer's grace
                                When Dorian shepherds sang to Proserpine!
                                For she herself had trod Sicilian fields,
                                She knew the Dorian water's gush divine,
                                She knew each lily white which Enna yields
                                Each rose with blushing face;
                                She loved the Dorian pipe, the Dorian strain.
                                But ah, of our poor Thames she never heard!
                                Her foot the Cumner cowslips never stirr'd;
                                And we should tease her with our plaint in vain!

                                Well! wind-dispersed and vain the words will be,
                                Yet, Thyrsis, let me give my grief its hour
                                In the old haunt, and find our tree-topp'd hill!
                                Who, if not I, for questing here hath power?
                                I know the wood which hides the daffodil,
                                I know the Fyfield tree,
                                I know what white, what purple fritillaries
                                The grassy harvest of the river-fields,
                                Above by Ensham, down by Sandford, yields,
                                And what sedged brooks are Thames's tributaries;

                                I know these slopes; who knows them if not I?--
                                But many a tingle on the loved hillside,
                                With thorns once studded, old, white-blossom'd trees,
                                Where thick the cowslips grew, and far descried
                                High tower'd the spikes of purple orchises,
                                Hath since our day put by
                                The coronals of that forgotten time;
                                Down each green bank hath gone the ploughboy's team,
                                And only in the hidden brookside gleam
                                Primroses, orphans of the flowery prime.

                                Where is the girl, who by the boatman's door,
                                Above the locks, above the boating throng,
                                Unmoor'd our skiff when through the Wytham flats,
                                Red loosestrife and blond meadow-sweet among
                                And darting swallows and light water-gnats,
                                We track'd the shy Thames shore?
                                Where are the mowers, who, as the tiny swell
                                Of our boat passing heaved the river-grass,
                                Stood with suspended scythe to see us pass?--
                                They all are gone, and thou art gone as well!

                                Yes, thou art gone! and round me too the night
                                In ever-nearing circle weaves her shade.
                                I see her veil draw soft across the day,
                                I feel her slowly chilling breath invade
                                The cheek grown thin, the brown hair sprent with grey;
                                I feel her finger light
                                Laid pausefully upon life's headlong train; --
                                The foot less prompt to meet the morning dew,
                                The heart less bounding at emotion new,
                                And hope, once crush'd, less quick to spring again.

                                And long the way appears, which seem'd so short
                                To the less practised eye of sanguine youth;
                                And high the mountain-tops, in cloudy air,
                                The mountain-tops where is the throne of Truth,
                                Tops in life's morning-sun so bright and bare!
                                Unbreachable the fort
                                Of the long-batter'd world uplifts its wall;
                                And strange and vain the earthly turmoil grows,
                                And near and real the charm of thy repose,
                                And night as welcome as a friend would fall.

                                But hush! the upland hath a sudden loss
                                Of quiet!--Look, adown the dusk hill-side,
                                A troop of Oxford hunters going home,
                                As in old days, jovial and talking, ride!
                                From hunting with the Berkshire hounds they come.
                                Quick! let me fly, and cross
                                Into yon farther field!--'Tis done; and see,
                                Back'd by the sunset, which doth glorify
                                The orange and pale violet evening-sky,
                                Bare on its lonely ridge, the Tree! the Tree!

                                I take the omen! Eve lets down her veil,
                                The white fog creeps from bush to bush about,
                                The west unflushes, the high stars grow bright,
                                And in the scatter'd farms the lights come out.
                                I cannot reach the signal-tree to-night,
                                Yet, happy omen, hail!
                                Hear it from thy broad lucent Arno-vale
                                (For there thine earth forgetting eyelids keep
                                The morningless and unawakening sleep
                                Under the flowery oleanders pale),

                                Hear it, O Thyrsis, still our tree is there!--
                                Ah, vain! These English fields, this upland dim,
                                These brambles pale with mist engarlanded,
                                That lone, sky-pointing tree, are not for him;
                                To a boon southern country he is fled,
                                And now in happier air,
                                Wandering with the great Mother's train divine
                                (And purer or more subtle soul than thee,
                                I trow, the mighty Mother doth not see)
                                Within a folding of the Apennine,

                                Thou hearest the immortal chants of old!--
                                Putting his sickle to the perilous grain
                                In the hot cornfield of the Phrygian king,
                                For thee the Lityerses-song again
                                Young Daphnis with his silver voice doth sing;
                                Sings his Sicilian fold,
                                His sheep, his hapless love, his blinded eyes--
                                And how a call celestial round him rang,
                                And heavenward from the fountain-brink he sprang,
                                And all the marvel of the golden skies.

                                There thou art gone, and me thou leavest here
                                Sole in these fields! yet will I not despair.
                                Despair I will not, while I yet descry
                                'Neath the mild canopy of English air
                                That lonely tree against the western sky.
                                Still, still these slopes, 'tis clear,
                                Our Gipsy-Scholar haunts, outliving thee!
                                Fields where soft sheep from cages pull the hay,
                                Woods with anemonies in flower till May,
                                Know him a wanderer still; then why not me?

                                A fugitive and gracious light he seeks,
                                Shy to illumine; and I seek it too.
                                This does not come with houses or with gold,
                                With place, with honour, and a flattering crew;
                                'Tis not in the world's market bought and sold--
                                But the smooth-slipping weeks
                                Drop by, and leave its seeker still untired;
                                Out of the heed of mortals he is gone,
                                He wends unfollow'd, he must house alone;
                                Yet on he fares, by his own heart inspired.

                                Thou too, O Thyrsis, on like quest wast bound;
                                Thou wanderedst with me for a little hour!
                                Men gave thee nothing; but this happy quest,
                                If men esteem'd thee feeble, gave thee power,
                                If men procured thee trouble, gave thee rest.
                                And this rude Cumner ground,
                                Its fir-topped Hurst, its farms, its quiet fields,
                                Here cams't thou in thy jocund youthful time,
                                Here was thine height of strength, thy golden prime!
                                And still the haunt beloved a virtue yields.

                                What though the music of thy rustic flute
                                Kept not for long its happy, country tone;
                                Lost it too soon, and learnt a stormy note
                                Of men contention-tost, of men who groan,
                                Which task'd thy pipe too sore, and tired thy throat--
                                It fail'd, and thou wage mute!
                                Yet hadst thou always visions of our light,
                                And long with men of care thou couldst not stay,
                                And soon thy foot resumed its wandering way,
                                Left human haunt, and on alone till night.

                                Too rare, too rare, grow now my visits here!
                                'Mid city-noise, not, as with thee of yore,
                                Thyrsis! in reach of sheep-bells is my home.
                                --Then through the great town's harsh, heart-wearying roar,
                                Let in thy voice a whisper often come,
                                To chase fatigue and fear:
                                Why faintest thou! I wander'd till I died.
                                Roam on! The light we sought is shining still.
                                Dost thou ask proof? Our tree yet crowns the hill,
                                Our Scholar travels yet the loved hill-side.
                                اللھم صلی علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما صلیت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔
                                اللھم بارک علٰی محمد وعلٰی آل محمد کما بارکت علٰی ابراھیم وعلٰی آل ابراھیم انک حمید مجید۔

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