Goodyere, I am glad, and grateful to report, Myself a witness of thy few days' sport: Where I both learned, why wise men hawking follow, And why that bird was sacred to Apollo. She doth instruct men by her gallant flight, That they to knowledge so should tower upright, And never stoop, but to strike ignorance: Which if they miss, they yet should readvance To former height, and there in circle tarry, Till they be sure to make the fool their quarry. Now, in whose pleasures I have this discerned, What would his serious actions me have learned? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STANZAS IN MEMORY OF THE AUTHOR OF OBERMANN by MATTHEW ARNOLD FONTENOY by THOMAS OSBORNE DAVIS THE MAIZE by WILLIAM WHITEMAN FOSDICK OF THE WARS IN IRELAND by JOHN HARRINGTON THE RUBAIYAT, 1879 EDITION: 17 by OMAR KHAYYAM THE BOUNDARIES OF APPRECIATION by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS THE MORAL FABLES: THE TRIAL OF THE FOX by AESOP |