I FROM Delphi to Camden -- little Hoosier towns, -- But here were classic meadows, blooming dales and downs; And here were grassy pastures, dewy as the leas Trampled over by the trains of royal pageantries! And here the winding highway loitered through the shade Of the hazel covert, where, in ambuscade, Loomed the larch and linden, and the greenwood-tree Under which bold Robin Hood loud hallooed to me! Here the stir and riot of the busy day Dwindled to the quiet of the breath of May; Gurgling brooks, and ridges lily-marged and spanned By the rustic bridges found in Wonderland! II From Delphi to Camden, -- from Camden back again! -- And now the night was on us, and the lightning and the rain; And still the way was wondrous with the flash of hill and plain, -- The stars like printed asterisks -- the moon a murky stain! And I thought of tragic idyll, and of flight and hot pursuit, And the jingle of the bridle and cuirass and spur on boot, As our horses' hooves struck showers from the flinty boulders set In freshet-ways of writhing reed and drowning violet. And we passed beleaguered castles, with their battlements a-frown; Where a tree fell in the forest was a turret toppled down; While my master and commander -- the brave knight I galloped with On this reckless road to ruin or to fame was -- Dr. Smith! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ADAM AND HIS FATHER by KAREN SWENSON ON A LADY WHO FANCIED HERSELF A BEAUTY by CHARLES SACKVILLE (1637-1706) ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 31 by PHILIP SIDNEY OUR LEFT' by FRANCIS ORRERY TICKNOR WILLIE AND HELEN by HEW AINSLIE PASSED BY by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS TO DR. AIKIN ON HIS COMPLAINING THAT SHE NEGLECTED HIM by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |