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A Farewell

Topics: classic

Down the steep west unrolled,         I watch the river of the sunset flow,     With all its crimson lights, and gleaming gold,         Into the dusk below.     And even as I gaze,         The soft lights fade,-the pageant gay is o'er,     And all is grey and dark, like those lost days,         The days that are no more.     No more through whispering pines,         I shall behold, in the else silent even,     The first faint star-watch set along the lines         Of the white tents of heaven.     Before the earliest buds         Have softly opened, heralding the May     With tender light illuming the gray woods,         I shall be gone away.     Ah! wood-walks winding sweet         Through all the valleys sloping to the west,     Where glad brooks wander with melodious feet,         In musical unrest,--     Ye will not miss me here         With all the bright things of the coming May,     And the rejoicing of the awakened year,--         I shall be far away.     Yet in your loneliest nooks,         I know where all the greenest mosses grow,     And where the violets lift their first sweet looks,         Out of the waning snow.     And I have heard, unsought,         Under the musing shadows of the beech,     Wood-voices answering my unspoken thought,         In half-articulate speech.     And oh! ye shadowy bands,         Rank above rank along yon rocky height,     That lift into the heavens your mailed hands,         And linked armour bright.     What other eyes will trace         From this dear window haunted with the past,     Strange likeness to some well beloved face,         Among your profiles vast?     What stranger hands will tend         The nameless treasures I must leave behind,--     My flowers, my birds, and each inanimate friend,         Linked closer than my kind.     These glorious landscapes old,         Framed in my cottage windows,--hill-sides dun,     With umber shadows lightened to pale gold         By touches of the sun,--     Valleys like emeralds set         Lonely and sweet in the dusk hills afar,     That half enclose them, like a carcanet         That holds a diamond star.     Will any gentler face,         Weary and sad sometimes, like mine grow bright     Touched with your simple beauty-in my place,         My garden of delight?--     I know not,--yet farewell         Sweet home of mine,--my parting song is o'er,     And stranger forms among your bowers shall dwell,         Where I return no more.

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"Down the steep west unrolled,..."

Kate Seymour Maclean's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "A Farewell"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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