Slow-travelling with dim eyes suffus'd with tears, Solemnly seemest, like a vapoury cloud, To rise before me-Rise, O ever rise, Rise like a cloud of Incense, from the Earth! LINES Written in the Album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest. I STOOD on *Brocken's sovran height, and saw By the blue distance. Heavily my way From many a note of many a waterfall, And the brook's chatter; 'mid whose islet stones The dingy kidling with its tinkling bell Leapt frolicsome, or old romantic goat Sat, his white beard slow waving. I moved on The highest mountain in the Hartz and indeed in North Germany. In low and languid *mood: for I had found Of our adored Country! O thou Queen, O dear, dear England! how my longing eye My native Land! Filled with the thought of thee this heart was proud, Yea, mine eye swam with tears: that all the view From sovran Brocken, woods and woody hills, Floated away, like a departing dream, Feeble and dim! Stranger, these impulses When I have gazed From some high eminence on goodly vales, And cots and villages embowered below, Where my tired mind might rest, and call it home. SOUTHEY'S Hymn to the Penates. Blame thou not lightly; nor will I profane, That man's sublimer spirit, who can feel That God is every where! the God who framed Mankind to be one mighty Family, Himself our Father, and the World our Home. ON OBSERVING A BLOSSOM On the 1st of February, 1796. SWEET Flower! that peeping from thy russet stem This dark, freeze-coated, hoarse, teeth-chattering Month Th Disappointment came, and pelting wrong * Chatterton. |