Now have I seen, in Graisivaudan's vale, The fruits that dangle and the vines that trail, The poplars standing up in bright blue air, The silver turmoil of the broad Isere And sheer pale cliffs that wait through Earth's long noon Till the round Sun be colder than the Moon. Mine be the ancient song of Travellers: I hate this glittering land where nothing stirs: I would go back, for I would see again Mountains less vast, a less abundant plain, The Northern Cliffs clean-swept with driven foam, And the rose-garden of my gracious home. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MAPLE AND SUMACH by CECIL DAY LEWIS ARIZONA POEMS: 4. THE WINDMILLS by JOHN GOULD FLETCHER INCIDENTS IN THE LIFE OF MY UNCLE ARLY by EDWARD LEAR AUSPEX by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL THE CHILD ALONE: 6. BLOCK CITY by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON THE HIGH TIDE AT GETTYSBURG [JULY 3, 1863] by WILL HENRY THOMPSON TO MY FRIENDS, WHO RIDICULED A TENDER LEAVE-TAKING by MATTHEW ARNOLD |