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The Native Country

Topics: classic

Where is that country? The unresting mind     Like a lapwing nears and leaves it and returns.     I know those unknown hill-springs where they rise,     I know the answer of the elms to the wind     When the wind on their heaving bosom lies     And sleeps. I know the grouping pines that crown     The long green hill and fling their darkness down,     A never-dying shadow; and well I know     How in the late months the whole wide woodland burns     Unsmoking, and the earth hangs still as still.     I know the town, the hamlets and the lone     Shelterless cottage where the wind's least tone     Is magnified, and his far-flung thundering shout     Brings near the incredible end of the world. I know!     Even in sleep-walk I should linger about     Those lanes, those streets sure-footed, and by the unfenced stream go,     Hearing the swift waters past the locked mill flow.     Where is that country? It lies in my mind,     Its trees and grassy shape and white-gashed hill     And springs and wind and weather; its village stone     And solitary stone are in my mind;     And every thought familiarly returns     To find its home, and birdlike circling still     Above the smouldering beeches of November     And the bare elms and rattled hedgerows of December.     That native country lies deep in my mind     For every thought and true affection's home.     And like that mental land are you become,     Part of that land, and I the thought that turns     Towards home. And as in that familiar land I find     Myself among each tree, spring, road and hill,     And at each present step my past footsteps remember;     So you in all my inward being lies,     In you my history, my earth and stream and skies.     Your late fire is it that in my boughs yet burns,     Your stone that to my passing footfall cries.

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"Where is that country? The unresting mind..."

John Frederick Freeman's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "The Native Country"... ### 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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