Transparent waters. I refreshed me long With the bright sparkling stream, and from the pebbles, That bedded all thy margin, singled out Rare casts of unknown shells, from off thy cliffs Broken by wintry surges. Thou wert calm, Even as an infant calm, that gentle evening; And one could hardly dream thou 'dst ever met And wrestled with the storm. A breath of air, Felt only in its coolness, from the west Stole over thee, and stirred thy golden mirror Into long waves, that only showed themselves In ripples on thy shore, - far distant ripples, Breaking the silence with their quiet kisses, And softly murmuring peace. Up the green hillock I mounted languidly, and at the summit On the new grass reposed, and saw that evening Fade sweetly over thee.
Thy slumbering waters floated, one long sheet Of burnished gold, between thy nearer shores Softly embraced, and melting distantly Into a yellow haze, embosomed low Mid shadowy hills and misty mountains, all Covered with showery light, as with a veil Of airy gauze. Beautiful were thy shores, And manifold their outlines, here up-swelling In bossy green, there hung in slaty cliffs, Black as if hewn from jet, and overtopped With the dark cedar's tufts, or new-leaved birch, Bright as the wave below. How glassy clear The far expanse! Beneath it all the sky
Swelled downward, and its fleecy clouds were gay With all their rainbow fringes, and the trees And cliffs and grassy knolls were all repeated Along the uncertain shores, - so clearly seen Beneath the invisible transparency, That land and water mingled, and the one Seemed melting in the other. Oh, how soft Yon mountain's heavenly blue, and all o'erlaid With a pale tint of roses! Deep between The ever-narrowing lake, just faintly marked By its reflected light, and farther on Buried in vapory foam, as if a surf Heaved on its utmost shore. How deep the silence! Only the rustling boughs, the broken ripple, The cricket and the tree-frog, with the tinkle Of bells in fold and pasture, or a voice Heard from a distant farm, or hollow bay Of home-returning hound, - a virgin land Just rescued from the wilderness, still showing Wrecks of the giant forest, yet all bright With a luxuriant culture, springing wheat, And meadows richly green, the blessed gift Of liberty and law. I gazed upon them, And on the unchanging lake, and felt awhile Unutterable joy, - I loved my land With more than filial love, - it was a joy That only spake in tears.
I woke, and found the lake was up before me, For a fresh, stirring breeze came from the south, And all its deep-green waves were tossed and mingled Into a war of foam. The new-risen sun Shone on them, as if they were worlds of stars, Or gems, or crystals, or some other thing Sparry and flashing bright. A gentle murmur, A roar scarce uttered, like a voice of mirth Amid the dancing waters, blended well With the colian whispering of boughs In a wide grove of pines. The fields and woods Were sparkling all with dew, and curling smoke Rose from the cottage fires; - the robin, too, And the brown thrush, and other birds concealed Amid the half-blown thickets, joyously Poured out their morning songs, and thus attended, I wandered by the shore. Oh, it was pleasant To feel the dashing of the dewy spray Rain on my forehead, and to look between Long crests of foam, into an unknown depth Of deepest green, and then to see that green Soft changing into snow. Over this waste Of rolling surges, on a lofty bank, With a broad surf beneath it, brightly shone White roofs and spires, and gilded vanes, and windows, Each like a flame, - thy peaceful tenements, Geneva, aptly named; for not the walls By the blue, arrowy Rhone, nor Leman's lake, With all its vineyard shores and mouldering castles, Nor even its shaggy mountains, nor above Its world of Alpine snows, - these are not more Than thou, bright Seneca, whether at peace, As I at evening met thee, or this morning, Tossed into foam. Thou, too, shalt have thy fame:
Genius shall make thy hills his home, and here Shall build his airy visions, bards shall come, And fondly sing thee, - pilgrims too shall haunt Thy sacred waters, and in after ages, Oh, may some votary on the hillock sit,
At evening, by thy shore!
Forever round thy sunny steep
The low waves curl, with sparkling foam,
And solemn murmurs deep;
While o'er the surging waters blue The ceaseless breezes throng,
And in the grand old woods awake An everlasting song.
The sordid strife and petty cares
That crowd the city's street,
The rush, the race, the storm of Life,
Upon thee never meet;
But quiet and contented hearts
Their daily tasks fulfil,
And meet with simple hope and trust The coming good or ill.
The spireless church stands, plain and brown, The winding road beside;
The green graves rise in silence near,
With moss-grown tablets wide ;
And early on the Sabbath morn, Along the flowery sod, Unfettered souls, with humble prayer, Go up to worship God.
And dearer far than sculptured fane Is that gray church to me,
For in its shade my mother sleeps, Beneath the willow-tree;
And often, when my heart is raised By sermon and by song,
Her friendly smile appears to me From the seraphic throng.
The sunset glow, the moonlit stream, Part of my being are;
The fairy flowers that bloom and die, The skies so clear and far:
The stars that circle Night's dark brow, The winds and waters free,
Each with a lesson all its own, Are monitors to me.
The systems in their endless march Eternal truth proclaim;
The flowers God's love from day to day In gentlest accents name;
The skies for burdened hearts and faint A code of Faith prepare;
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