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????? ??? ????? ????? (Greek - Poems and Prose Remains, Vol II)

By Arthur Hugh Clough

Topics: classic

Upon the water, in the boat,     I sit and sketch as down I float:     The stream is wide, the view is fair,     I sketch it looking backward there.     The stream is strong, and as I sit     And view the picture that we quit,     It flows and flows, and bears the boat,     And I sit sketching as we float.     Each pointed height, each wavy line,     To new and other forms combine;     Proportions vary, colours fade,     And all the landscape is remade.     Depicted neither far nor near,     And larger there and smaller here,     And varying down from old to new,     Een I can hardly think it true.     Yet still I look, and still I sit,     Adjusting, shaping, altering it;     And still the current bears the boat     And me, still sketching as I float.     Still as I sit, with something new     The foreground intercepts my view;     Even the distant mountain range     From the first moment suffers change.

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"Upon the water, in the boat,..."

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Author:Arthur Hugh Clough

"Upon the water, in the boat,..." by Arthur Hugh Clough

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Arthur Hugh Clough

About Arthur Hugh Clough

Arthur Hugh Clough (1819–1861) was an English poet whose work explores Victorian doubt and moral uncertainty. His poems "Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth" and "The Latest Decalogue" are sharp, thoughtful, and still widely anthologized.

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"Cease, empty Faith, the Spectrum saith,     I was,..."

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