Poems


I come from all places
and to all places I go:
I am art among the arts
and mountain among mountains.
I know the strange names
of flowers and herbs
and of fatal deceptions
and magnificent griefs.

In night's darkness I've seen
raining down on my head
pure flames, flashing rays
of beauty divine.
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    In paradise perchance the eye may stray
    from gazing upon everlasting day
    to see the day illumined, and renew
    from mirrored truth the likeness of the true.
    Then looking on the blessed land' twill see
    that all is as it is, and yet made free:
    salvation changes not, nor yet destroys,
    garden nor gardener, children nor their toys.
    Evil it will not see, for evil lies
    not in God's picture but in crooked eyes,
    not in the source but in malicious choice,
    and not in sound but in the tuneless voice.
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      The Shepherd And The Philosopher

      Remote from cities liv'd a swain,
      Unvex'd with all the cares of gain;
      His head was silver'd o'er with age,
      And long experience made him sage;
      In summer's heat and winter's cold,
      He led his flock and penn'd the fold;
      His hours in cheerful labour flew,
      Nor envy nor ambition knew:
      His wisdom and his honest fame
      Through all the country rais'd his name

      a deep philosopher (whose rules
      Of moral life were drawn from schools)
      The shepherd's homely cottage sought,
      And thus explor'd his reach of thought.

      'Whence is thy learning? Hath thy toil
      o'er books consum'd the midnight oil?
      Hast thou old Greece and Rome survey'd,
      And the vast sense of Plato weigh'd?
      Hath Socrates thy soul refin' d,
      And hast thou fathom'd Tully's mind?
      Or, like the wise Ulysses, thrown,
      By various fates, on realms unknown,
      Hast thou through many cities stray'd,
      Their customs, laws, and manners weigh'd? '

      The shepherd modestly replied,
      'I ne'er the paths of learning tried;
      Nor have I roam'd in foreign parts,
      To read mankind, their laws and arts;
      For man is practis'd in disguise,
      he cheats the most discerning eyes.
      Who by that search shall wiser grow?
      By that ourselves we never know.
      The little knowledge I have gain' d,
      Was all from simple nature drain' d;
      Hence my life's maxims took their rise,
      Hence grew my settled hate to vice.
      The daily labours of the bee
      Awake my soul to industry.
      Who can observe the careful ant,
      And not provide for future want?
      My dog (the trustiest of his kind)
      With gratitude inflames my mind:
      I mark his true, his faithful way,
      And in my service copy Tray.
      In constancy and nuptial love,
      I learn my duty from the dove.
      The hen, who from the chilly air,
      With pious wing protects her care,
      And ev'ry fowl that flies at large,
      Instructs me in a parent's charge. '

      'From nature too I take my rule,
      To shun contempt and ridicule.
      I never, with important air,
      In conversation overbear.
      Can grave and formal pass for wise,
      When men the solemn owl despise?
      My tongue within my lips I rein;
      For who talks much must talk in vain,
      We from the wordy torrent fly:
      Who listens to the chatt'ring pye?
      Nor would I, with felonious flight,
      By stealth invade my neighbour's right:
      Rapacious animals we hate;
      Kites, hawks, and wolves, deserve their fate.
      Do not we just abhorrence find
      Against the toad and serpent kind?
      But envy, calumny, and spite,
      Bear stronger venom in their bite.
      Thus ev'ry object of creation
      Can furnish hints to contemplation;
      And from the most minute and mean,
      a virtuous mind can morals glean. '

      'Thy fame is just, ' the sage replies;
      'Thy virtue proves thee truly wise.
      Pride often guides the author's pen,
      Books as affected are as men:
      But he who studies nature's laws,
      From certain truth his maxims draws;
      And those, without our schools, suffice,
      To make men moral, good, and wise. '
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        Faint winds, and far away a fading laughter...
        And the rain and over the fields a voice calling...
        The shadow of a dove
        Falls on the cote, the trees are filled with wings;
        And down the valley through the crying trees
        The body of the darker storm flies; brings
        With its new air the breath of sunken seas
        And slender tenuous thunder...
        But I wait...
        Wait for the mists and for the blacker rain
        Heavier winds that stir the veil of fate,
        Happier winds that pile her hair;
        Again
        They tear me, teach me, strew the heavy air
        Upon me, winds that I know, and storm.
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          Air.
          Love in her eyes sits playing,
          And sheds delicious death;
          Love on her lips is straying,
          And warbling in her breath;
          Love on her breast sits panting,
          And swells with soft desire;
          Nor grace nor charm is wanting
          To set the heart on fire.

          Air.
          O ruddier than the cherry!
          O sweeter than the berry!
          O Nymph more bright
          Than moonshine night,
          Like kidlings blithe and merry!

          Ripe as the melting cluster!
          No lily has such lustre;
          Yet hard to tame
          As raging flame,
          And fierce as storms that bluster.
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