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THE WILD
Friends of my heart, lovers
of Nature's works,
Let me transport you to
those wild blue mountains
That rear their summits
near the Hudson's wave
Though not the loftiest
that begirt the land,
They yet sublimely rise,
and on their heights
Your souls may have a sweet
foretaste of heaven,
And traverse wide the boundless.
From this rock
The nearest to the sky,
let us look out
Upon the earth, as the first
swell of day
Is bearing back the duskiness
of night.
But lo! a sea of mist o'er
all beneath;
An ocean, shoreless, motionless
and mute,
No rolling swell is there,
no sounding surf;
Silent and solemn all; the
stormy main
To stillness frozen, while
the crested waves
Leaped in the whirlwind,
and the loosen'd foam
Flew o’er the angry deep.
See! now ascends
The Lord of Day, waking
with pearly fire
The dormant depths. See
how his glowing breath
The rising surges kindles;
lo! they heave
Like golden sands upon Sahara's
gales.
Those airy forms disporting
from the mass,
Like winged ships, sail
o'er the wondrous plain
Beautiful vision! Now the
veil is rent,
And the coy earth her virgin
bosom bares,
Slowly unfolding to the
enraptured gaze
Her thousand charms.
Thomas Cole. |