The lark sung loud; the music at his heart Had called him early; upward straight he went, And bore in nature's quire the merriest part, As to the lake's broad shore my steps I bent; The waterflies with glancing motion drove Their dimpling eddies in among the blooms Shed by the flowering poplars from above; While, overhead, the rooks, on sable plumes, Floated and dipt about the gleaming haze Of April, crost anon by April glooms, As is the fashion of her changeful days; When, what the rain-cloud blots, the sun relumes O' the instant, and the shifting landscape shows Each change, and, like a tide, the distance comes and goes! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NOT BY THE SEA by SARA TEASDALE EVENEN IN THE VILLAGE by WILLIAM BARNES HOMAGE TO THE BRITISH MUSEUM by WILLIAM EMPSON A POET'S FANCIES: 8. THE MODERN POET; A SONG OF DERIVATIONS by ALICE MEYNELL THE OLD MAN AND JIM by JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY BASE DETAILS by SIEGFRIED SASSOON |