Fair, shining mountains of my pilgrimage, And flow'ry vales, whose flow'rs were stars: The days and nights of my first happy age; An age without distaste and wars: When I by thoughts ascend your sunny heads, And mind those sacred midnight lights, By which I walked, when curtained rooms and beds Confined, or sealed up others' sights: O then how bright And quick a light Doth brush my heart and scatter night; Chasing that shade Which my sins made, While I so spring, as if I could not fade! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE: 20 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING ROBERT GOULD SHAW by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR ASPATIA'S SONG, FR. THE MAID'S TRAEGDY by JOHN FLETCHER BROTHER JONATHAN'S LAMENT FOR SISTER CAROLINE [DECEMBER 2O, 1860] by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES THE AEOLIAN HARP; AT THE SURF INN by HERMAN MELVILLE TWO POEMS TO HANS THOMA ON HIS SIXIETH BIRTHDAY: 1. MOONLIGHT NIGHT by RAINER MARIA RILKE VAN ELSEN by FREDERICK GEORGE SCOTT |