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The Country Gods

Topics: classic

I dwell, with all things great and fair:     The green earth and the lustral air,     The sacred spaces of the sea,     Day in, day out, companion me.     Pure-faced, pure-thoughted, folk are mine     With whom to sit and laugh and dine;     In every sunlit room is heard     Love singing, like an April bird,     And everywhere the moonlit eyes     Of beauty guard our paradise;     While, at the ending of the day,     To the kind country gods we pray,     And dues of our fair living pay.     Thus, when, reluctant, to the town     I go, with country sunshine brown,     So small and strange all seems to me -     the boonfellow of the sea -     That these town-people say and be:     Their insect lives, their insect talk,     Their busy little insect walk,     Their busy little insect stings -     And all the while the sea-weed swings     Against the rock, and the wide roar     Rises foam-lipped along the shore.     Ah! then how good my life I know,     How good it is each day to go     Where the great voices call, and where     The eternal rhythms flow and flow.     In that august companionship,     The subtle poisoned words that drip,     With guileless guile, from friendly lip,     The lie that flits from ear to ear,     Ye shall not speak, ye shall not hear;     Nor shall you fear your heart to say,     Lest he who listens shall betray.     The man who hearkens all day long     To the sea's cosmic-thoughted song     Comes with purged ears to lesser speech,     And something of the skyey reach     Greatens the gaze that feeds on space;     The starlight writes upon his face     That bathes in starlight, and the morn     Chrisms with dew, when day is born,     The eyes that drink the holy light     Welling from the deep springs of night.     And so - how good to catch the train     Back to the country gods again.

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"I dwell, with all things great and fair:..."

"The Country Gods" is a quintessential example of Richard Le Gallienne's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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"Her eyes are bluebells now, her voice a bird,     ..."

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