Yet not for him lifts the low weather cloud, Not for his solace comes the clearing gale, Who dreams but on himself, whose breath may fail And leave no crown his due, no god his debtor; Of his own gloom sole builder and begetter. But Nature for thy mirth shall laugh aloud, O trustful child, who on her heart hast lain In every flow of storm and fit of rain. So let the day be wilder, windier, wetter, It irks not thee, nor bids thy fealty end, Affection wasted and allegiance vain; But rather seems like an embracing Friend Who puts thee from him, but to view thee better, And better so to fold thee close again. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...VARIATIONS: 11 by CONRAD AIKEN CAMPUS SONNET: BEFORE AN EXAMINATION by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET KEEPING UP WITH THE SIGNS by MADELINE DEFREES TO HENRY LINCOLN JOHNSON - LAWYER by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON STUDY FOR A GEOGRAPHICAL TRAIL; 3. WASHINGTON, D.C. by CLARENCE MAJOR DOMESDAY BOOK: THE JURY DELIBERATES by EDGAR LEE MASTERS SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: ELIZABETH CHILDERS by EDGAR LEE MASTERS A VALENTINE TO SHERWOOD ANDERSON by GERTRUDE STEIN HYBRIDS OF WAR: A MORALITY POEM: 4. THE MORAL by KAREN SWENSON |