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The Lake.

Topics: classic

A limpid lake, a diamond gem,         The moonbeams kissed with light;     And all the stars that heaven knew         Were mirrored in the night.     How fair the world, how fair the night,         When lake and river run     Like jeweled streams of fairy land         Beneath a silver sun.     The lake grew proud and claimed each star         That lay upon her breast;     "Ah! they are mine," she said; "these gems         That in my bosom rest.     "And yonder moon, that sails on high,         Doth shine for me alone;     Beneath the foam that crests my waves         Is built her silver throne."     A star-king knelt and kissed the waves         That swept the shadowed shore;     "Our moon is queen of heaven," he said,         "Is queen forevermore.     A thousand lakes are hers by night,         A thousand lakes of light;     A thousand rivers kiss her feet,         A thousand rivers bright.     "Then be not vain, thou lakelet small,         The moon is not for thee;     Her home is in the river wide,         Her throne is in the sea."     The bright waves swept the silent shore,         The star-king crept away;     Yet calm and fair, still unconvinced,         The lake in silence lay.     The moon, that swept her silvery light         Far o'er the waters wide,     Belonged to her, and all the stars         That floated side by side.     Ah! silver lake, too well we know         How like we are to thee;     A thousand truths are in the world         That we may never see!

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"A limpid lake, a diamond gem,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Fannie Isabelle Sherrick delivers a powerful performance in "The Lake."... ### 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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