ODELICATE! Even in wooded lands They show the margin of my world, My own horizon; little bands Of twigs unveil that edge impearled. And what is more mine own than this, My limit, level with mine eyes? For me precisely do they kiss -- The rounded earth, the rounding skies. It has my stature, that keen line (Let mathematics vouch for it). The lark's horizon is not mine, No, nor his nestlings' where they sit; No, nor the child's. And, when I gain The hills, I lift it as I rise Erect; anon, back to the plain I soothe it with mine equal eyes. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...QUATRAIN: FROM EASTERN SOURCES: 2 by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH SACRED LYRIC by ISIDORE G. ASCHER VOICE OF THE SEA by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE MY CHASTE MISTRESS by GOTTFRIED AUGUST BURGER THOUGHTS ON THE CONSTITUTION OF HUMAN NATURE by JOHN BYROM OBSERVATIONS IN THE ART OF ENGLISH POESY: 14. TROCHAIC VERSE: THE TENTH EPIGRAM by THOMAS CAMPION |