WARM, generous and young in heart and brain, A wise, ripe scholar of the antique mould, Had he but chosen he might have enrolled His name among philosophers who gain Renown, and lead an academic train. But unambitious in a humbler fold -- Humbler yet wider -- he the current told Of others' thoughts and works in graceful strain. So from his watch-tower calm the public mind He charmed and wisely led. Still young in age, And still in fireside talk the cordial friend, He read between the lines upon life's page The deeper meaning those alone can find Whose souls toward truth and not its semblance, tend. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE HOUSE ON THE HILL by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON THE TENT ON THE BEACH: 5. THE CHANGELING by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER KNOWLEDGE by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH OLD SARUM; LINES ON THE CONFERENCE OF THE ENGLISH CHURCH AT SALISBURY by ALICE COLBURN BEAL |