You may hover round the drowsy hearth, And breed inertia if you will, With all the swarm of kindred ills And pillsGive me the open air! Give me Nature, even though it means. To face alone her fiercest moods. I'd drink the ozone of the storm, And step in Old Boreas' tracks As he walks with giant swing and stride, Calk-shod, across the continent. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EPITHALAMION MADE AT LINCOLNES INNE by JOHN DONNE VERSES WRITTEN IN AN ALBUM OF A LADY'S COMMON-PLACE BOOK by THOMAS MOORE THE RUBAIYAT, 1879 EDITION: 101 by OMAR KHAYYAM TO MY ANTENOR, MARCH 16, 1661/2 by KATHERINE PHILIPS SONNET: 18 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE A RECEIPT FOR WRITING A NOVEL by MARY (CUMBERLAND) ALCOCK MOUNT PIERUS by ANTIPATER OF SIDON HYMN, COMPOSED FOR THE CHILDREN OF A SUNDAY SCHOOL by BERNARD BARTON A DIALOGUE (TO BE SUNG TO THE VIOL, BY A BASE, AND A TREBLE) by JOSEPH BEAUMONT |