The Invitation

字號(hào):


     BEST and brightest come away —
     Fairer far than this fair day
     Which like thee to those in sorrow
     Comes to bid a sweet good-morrow
     To the rough year just awake
     In its cradle on the brake.
     The brightest hour of unborn Spring
     Through the winter wandering
     Found it seems the halcyon morn
     To hoar February born;
     Bending from heaven in azure mirth
     It kiss'd the forehead of the earth
     And smiled upon the silent sea
     And bade the frozen streams be free
     And waked to music all their fountains
     And breathed upon the frozen mountains
     And like a prophetess of May
     Strew'd flowers upon the barren way
     Making the wintry world appear
     Like one on whom thou smilest dear.
     Away away from men and towns
     To the wild woods and the downs—
     To the silent wilderness
     Where the soul need not repress
     Its music lest it should not find
     An echo in another's mind
     While the touch of Nature's art
     Harmonizes heart to heart.
     Radiant Sister of the Day
     Awake! arise! and come away!
     To the wild woods and the plains
     To the pools where winter rains
     Image all their roof of leaves
     Where the pine its garland weaves
     Of sapless green and ivy dun
     Round stems that never kiss the sun;
     Where the lawns and pastures be
     And the sandhills of the sea;
     Where the melting hoar-frost wets
     The daisy-star that never sets
     And wind-flowers and violets
     Which yet join not scent to hue
     Crown the pale year weak and new;
     When the night is left behind
     In the deep east dim and blind
     And the blue noon is over us
     And the multitudinous
     Billows murmur at our feet
     Where the earth and ocean meet
     And all things seem only one
     In the universal Sun.