Folk alien to the Muse have hemm'd us round And fiends have suck'd our blood: our best delight Is poison'd, and the year's infective blight Hath made almost a silence of sweet sound. But you, what fortune, Percy, have you found At Harrow? doth fair hope your toil requite? Doth beauty win her praise and truth her right, Or hath the good seed fal'n on stony ground? Ply the art ever nobly, single-soul'd Like Brahms, or as you ruled in Wells erewhile, -- Nor yet the memory of that zeal is cold -- Where lately I, who love the purer style, Enter'd and felt your spirit as of old Beside me, listening in the chancel-aisle. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE JOBHOLDER by DAVID IGNATOW A THANKSGIVING TO GOD [FOR HIS HOUSE] by ROBERT HERRICK HAUNTED HOUSES by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW FULFILLMENT by ROBERT MALISE BOWYER NICHOLS THE FLIGHT OF THE WAR-EAGLE by OBADIAH CYRUS AURINGER A NIGHT IN JUNE by ALFRED AUSTIN THE WEDDING DAY; OR, THE BUCCANEER'S CURSE; A FAMILY LEGEND by RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM |