These were in truth brave days. From our high perch, The box-seat of our travelling chariot, then We children spied the world 'twas ours to search, And mocked like birds at manners and at men. What wonders we beheld, Havre, Rouen, Caen, The Norman caps, the Breton crowds in church, The loyal Loire, the valorous Vendéen, And all the Revolution left in lurch That very yearthings old as Waterloo. But when we neared the mountains crowned with snows, And heard the torrents roar, our wonder grew Over our wit, and a new pleasure rose Wild in our hearts, and stopped our tongues with dread, The sense of death and beauty overhead. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HEMLOCK AND CEDAR by CARL SANDBURG THE UNDERGRADUATE KILLED IN BATTLE; OXFORD, 1915 by GEORGE SANTAYANA UPON JULIA'S BREASTS by ROBERT HERRICK A HYMN WRITTEN IN WINDSOR FOREST by ALEXANDER POPE THE LAMP [LAMPE] by HENRY VAUGHAN THE BROOK: AUTUMN by LAURA ABELL FELDMESTEN OR MEASURING THE GRAVES by ALTER ABELSON |