I. SPRING'S sweet odours from the meadow Fling their fragrance far and wide, And the tall trees cast the shadow Of the winter's gloom aside; But for me no spring is bearing Gladness to my heart despairing; Comes no more with soothing power Kindly voice, or friendly hand, Song of home, or breath of flower, From my own dear native land. II. High in Heaven, circling nightly, Moon and stars shine overhead; Mighty rivers rush on brightly To the ocean's distant bed; But for me, in sorrow pining, Star and stream in vain are shining, Foreign skies are drear above me, By a foreign shore I stand, Thinking of the friends that love me, In my own dear far-off land. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ELEGY BEFORE DEATH by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY THE SHEPHERD O' THE FARM by WILLIAM BARNES TO NIGHT by GEORGE HERBERT CLARKE THROUGH THE TELESCOPE by SAMUEL VALENTINE COLE THIS IS A JOY by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES ELEGY: 15. THE EXPOSTULATION by JOHN DONNE |