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Time From His Grave

Topics: classic

When the south-west wind came     The air grew bright and sweet, as though a flame     Had cleansed the world of winter. The low sky     As the wind lifted it rose trembling vast and high,     And white clouds sallied by     As children in their pleasure go     Chasing the sun beneath the orchard's shadow and snow.     Nothing, nothing was the same!     Not the dull brick, not the stained London stone,     Not the delighted trees that lost their moan--     Their moan that daily vexed me with such pain     Until I hated to see trees again;     Nor man nor woman was the same     Nor could be stones again,     Such light and colour with the south-west came.     As I drank all that brightness up I saw     A dark globe lapt in fold on fold of gloom,     With all her hosts asleep in that cold tomb,     Sealed by an iron law.     And there amid the hills,     Locked in an icy hollow lay the bones     Of one that ghostly and enormous slept     Obscure 'neath wrinkled ice and bedded stones.     But as spring water the old dry channel fills,     Came the south-west wind filling all the air.     Then Time rose up, ghostly, enormous, stark,     With cold gray light in cold gray eyes, and dark     Dark clouds caught round him, feet to rigid chin.     The wind ran flushed and glorious in,     Godlike from hill to frozen hill-top stepp'd,     And swiftly upon that bony stature swept.     Then a long breath and then quick breaths I heard,     In those black caves of stillness music stirred,     Those icy heights were riven:     From crown to clearing hollow grass was green;     And godlike from flushed hill to hill-top leapt     Time, youthful, quick, serene,     Dew flashing from his limbs, light from his eyes     To the sheeny skies.     A lark's song climbed from earth and dropped from heaven,     Far off the tide clung to the shore     Now silent nevermore.     ... Into what vision'd wonder was I swept,     Upon what unimaginable joyance had I leapt!

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"When the south-west wind came..."

John Frederick Freeman's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Time From His Grave"... ### 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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"Away, away--     Through that strange void and vas..."

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