Hence with your jeerings petulant and low; My love of home no circumstance can shake; Too ductile for the change of place to break, And far too passionate for thee to know; I and yon sycamore have grown together, How on yon slope the shifting sunsets lie, None know like me and mine; and, tending hither, Flows the strong current of my memory; From that same flower-bed, ever dear to me, I learnt how marigolds do bloom and fade; And from the grove, which skirts this garden-glade, I had my earliest thoughts of Love and Spring; Thou wott'st not how the heart of man is made; I learn from thee what change the world can bring. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A BROOK IN THE CITY by ROBERT FROST HYMN FOR EPIPHANY by REGINALD HEBER THE SHEPHERD OF KING ADMETUS by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL RUNNING THE BATTERIES by HERMAN MELVILLE SONNET: 106 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE NO SECOND TROY by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS JUNGLE by WILLIMINA L. ARMSTRONG NUPTIAL ODE ON THE MARRIAGE OF HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE OF WALES by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN |