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The Torrent And The River.

Topics: classic

With mighty rush and roar,      Adown a mountain steep      A torrent tumbled, - swelling o'er      Its rugged banks, - and bore      Vast ruin in its sweep.      The traveller were surely rash      To brave its whirling, foaming dash,      But one, by robbers sorely press'd,      Its terrors haply put to test.      They were but threats of foam and sound,      The loudest where the least profound.      With courage from his safe success,      His foes continuing to press,      He met a river in his course:      On stole its waters, calm and deep,      So silently they seem'd asleep,      All sweetly cradled, as I ween,      In sloping banks, and gravel clean, -      They threaten'd neither man nor horse.      Both ventured; but the noble steed,      That saved from robbers by his speed,      From that deep water could not save;      Both went to drink the Stygian wave;      Both went to cross, (but not to swim,)      Where reigns a monarch stern and grim,      Far other streams than ours.      Still men are men of dangerous powers;      Elsewhere, 'tis only ignorance that cowers.

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"With mighty rush and roar,..."

"The Torrent And The River." is a quintessential example of Jean de La Fontaine'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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