A Day for Wandering

字號:

I SET apart a day for wandering;
    I heard the woodlands ring,
    The hidden white-throat sing,
    And the harmonic West,
    Beyond a far hill-crest,
    Touch its Aeolian string.
    Remote from all the brawl and bruit of men,
    The iron tongue of Trade,
    I followed the clear calling of a wren
    Deep to the bosom of a sheltered glade,
    Where interwoven branches spread a shade
    Of soft cool beryl like the evening seas
    Unruffled by the breeze.
    And there—and there—
    I watched the maiden-hair,
    The pale blue iris-grass,
    The water-spider in its pause and pass
    Upon a pool that like a mirror was.
    I took for confidant
    The diligent ant 20
    Threading the clover and the sorrel aisles;
    For me were all the smiles
    Of the sequestered blossoms there abloom—
    Chalice and crown and plume;
    I drank the ripe rich attars blurred and blent,
    And won—Content!