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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


NO CONCEALMENT by LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY

Poet Analysis

First Line: THINK'ST THOU TO BE CONCEAL'D, THOU LITTLE STREAM
Last Line: OH! ERRING HUMAN HEART! WHAT THOUGHTS THOU LODGEST THERE.

THINK'ST thou to be conceal'd, thou little stream,
That through the lonely vale dost wend thy way,
Loving beneath the darkest arch to glide
Of woven branches, blent with hillocks gray?
The mist doth track thee, and reveal thy course
Unto the dawn, and a bright line of green
Tinting thy marge, and the white flocks that haste
At summer noon to taste thy crystal sheen,
Make plain thy wanderings to the eye of day.
And then, thy smiling answer to the moon,
Whose beams so freely on thy bosom sleep,
Unfold thy secret, even to night's dull noon --
How couldst thou hope, in such a world as this,
To shroud thy gentle path of beauty and of bliss?

Think'st thou to be conceal'd, thou little seed,
That in the bosom of the earth art cast,
And there, like cradled infant, sleep'st awhile,
Unmoved by trampling storm or thunder blast?
Thou bid'st thy time; for herald Spring shall come
And wake thee, all unwilling as thou art,
Unhood thy eyes, unfold thy clasping sheath,
And stir the languid pulses of thy heart;
The loving rains shall woo thee, and the dews
Weep o'er thy bed, and, ere thou art aware,
Forth steals the tender leaf, the wiry stem,
The trembling bud, the flower that scents the air;
And soon, to all, thy ripen'd fruitage tells
The evil or the good that in thy nature dwells.

Think'st thou to be conceal'd, thou little thought,
That in the curtain'd chamber of the soul
Dost wrap thyself so close, and dream to do
A secret work? Look to the hues that roll
O'er the changed brow -- the moving lips behold --
Linking thee unto speech -- the feet that run
Upon thy errands, and the deeds that stamp
Thy lineage plain before the noonday sun;
Look to the pen that writes thy history down
In those tremendous books that ne'er unclose
Until the day of doom, and blush to see
How vain thy trust in darkness to repose,
Where all things tend to judgment. So, beware,
Oh! erring human heart! what thoughts thou lodgest there.



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