About the flowerless land adventurous bees Pickeering hum; the rooks debate, divide, With many a hoarse aside, In solemn conclave on the budding trees; Larks in the skies and ploughboys o'er the leas Carol as if winter had never been; The very owl comes out to greet the sun; Rivers high hearted run; And hedges mantle with a flush of green. The curlew calls me where the salt winds blow; His troubled note dwells mournfully and dies; Then the long echo cries Deep in my heart. Ah, surely I must go! For there the tides, moon-haunted, ebb and flow; And there the seaboard murmurs resonant; The waves their interwoven fugue repeat And brooding surges beat A slow, melodious, continual chant. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO A FRIEND I CAN'T FIND by JAMES GALVIN A THOUGHT SUGGESTED BY A VIEW, OF SADDLEBACK IN CUMBERLAND by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE THE FIRESIDE by NATHANIEL COTTON THE CITY AT THE END OF THINGS by ARCHIBALD LAMPMAN THE TAY BRIDGE DISEASTER by WILLIAM MCGONAGALL ODE TO SILENCE by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY SONNETS FOR PICTURES: A VENETIAN PASTORAL (BY GIOGIONE) by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI |