文章列表
-
1.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,2)
-
II. Thus spake an aged man to one Who manhood's race had just begun. His form of manhood's noblest length Was strung with manhood's stoutest strength,...
-
2.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,3)
-
III. From where the hermit's cottage stood, Beneath its huge old guardian tree, The gazer's wand'ring eye might see, Where, in its maze of field and w...
-
3.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,4)
-
IV. And now, their rustic banquet done, And sheltered from the noontide sun By the old willow's pleasant shade, The guest and host the scene surveyed;...
-
4.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,5)
-
V. Thou seest how fair a scene is here; It seems as if 'twere planned above, And fashioned from some happier sphere, To be the home of peace and love...
-
5.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,6)
-
VI. I mind as if 'twere yesterday, The hour when first I stood beside The margin of yon rushing tide, And watched its wild waves in their play; These...
-
6.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,7)
-
VII. How strong a hand hath Time! Man rears, And names his work immortal; years Go by. Behold! where dwelt his pride, Stern Desolation's brood abid...
-
7.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,8)
-
VIII. I said I minded well the time, When first beside yon stream I stood; Then one interminable wood, In its unbounded breadth sublime, And in its l...
-
8.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,9)
-
IX. See, where yon towering, rocky ledge, Hangs jutting o'er the river's edge, There channelled dark, and dull, and deep, The lazy, lagging waters sle...
-
9.Mazelli, and Other Poems (Canto1,10)
-
X. Not in the peopled solitude Of cities, does true love belong; For it is of A thoughtful mood, And thought abides not with the throng. Nor is it wo...
-
10.Flame and Shadow(7)
-
August Moonrise The sun was gone, and the moon was coming Over the blue Connecticut hills; The west was rosy, the east was flushed, And over my head ...