ROBIN HOOD. TO A FRIEND. No! those days are gone away, No, the bugle sounds no more, On the fairest time of June To fair hostess Merriment, Gone, the merry morris din; So it is; yet let us sing SLEEP AND POETRY. As I lay in my bed slepe full unmete Chaucer. What is more gentle than a wind in summer? But what is higher beyond thought than thee? The thought thereof is awful, sweet, and holy, No one who once the glorious sun has seen, O Poesy! for thee I hold my pen, The overwhelming sweets, 'twill bring to me the fair Visions of all places: a bowery nook Will be elysium—an eternal book Whence I may copy many a lovely saying About the leaves, and flowers—about the playing Of nymphs in woods, and fountains; and the shade Keeping a silence round a sleeping maid; And many a verse from so strange influence That we must ever wonder how, and whence It came. Also imaginings will hover Round my fire-side, and haply there discover Vistas of solemn beauty, where I 'd wander In happy silence, like the clear Meander Through its lone vales; and where I found a spot Of awfuller shade, or an enchanted grot, Or a green hill o'erspread with chequer'd dress Of flowers, and fearful from its loveliness, Write on my tablets all that was permitted, All that was for our human senses fitted. Then the events of this wide world I 'd seize Like a strong giant, and my spirit tease Till at its shoulders it should proudly see Wings to find out an immortality. Stop and consider ! life is but a day; 0 for ten years, that I may overwhelm Myself in poesy! so I may do the deed That my own soul has to itself decreed. |