William Wordsworth. 1770–1850 |
|
536. Ode |
|
THERE was a time when meadow, grove, and
stream, |
|
The
earth, and every common sight, |
|
To
me did seem |
|
Apparell'd
in celestial light, |
|
The glory and
the freshness of a dream. |
5 |
It is not now as
it hath been of yore;— |
|
Turn
wheresoe'er I may, |
|
By
night or day, |
|
The things which
I have seen I now can see no more. |
|
|
|
The
rainbow comes and goes, |
10 |
And
lovely is the rose; |
|
The
moon doth with delight |
|
Look
round her when the heavens are bare; |
|
Waters
on a starry night |
|
Are
beautiful and fair; |
15 |
The
sunshine is a glorious birth; |
|
But
yet I know, where'er I go, |
|
That there hath
pass'd away a glory from the earth. |
|
|
|
Now, while the
birds thus sing a joyous song, |
|
And
while the young lambs bound |
20 |
As
to the tabor's sound, |
|
To me alone
there came a thought of grief: |
|
A timely
utterance gave that thought relief, |
|
And
I again am strong: |
|
The cataracts
blow their trumpets from the steep; |
25 |
No more shall
grief of mine the season wrong; |
|
I hear the
echoes through the mountains throng, |
|
The winds come
to me from the fields of sleep, |
|
And
all the earth is gay; |
|
Land
and sea |
30 |
Give
themselves up to jollity, |
|
And
with the heart of May |
|
Doth
every beast keep holiday;— |
|
Thou
Child of Joy, |
|
Shout round me,
let me hear thy shouts, thou happy |
35 |
Shepherd-boy! |
|
|
|
Ye blessèd
creatures, I have heard the call |
|
Ye
to each other make; I see |
|
The heavens
laugh with you in your jubilee; |
|
My
heart is at your festival, |
40 |
My
head hath its coronal, |
|
The fulness of
your bliss, I feel—I feel it all. |
|
O
evil day! if I were sullen |
|
While
Earth herself is adorning, |
|
This
sweet May-morning, |
45 |
And
the children are culling |
|
On
every side, |
|
In
a thousand valleys far and wide, |
|
Fresh
flowers; while the sun shines warm, |
|
And the babe
leaps up on his mother's arm:— |
50 |
I
hear, I hear, with joy I hear! |
|
—But
there's a tree, of many, one, |
|
A single field
which I have look'd upon, |
|
Both of them
speak of something that is gone: |
|
The
pansy at my feet |
55 |
Doth
the same tale repeat: |
|
Whither is fled
the visionary gleam? |
|
Where is it now,
the glory and the dream? |
|
|
|
Our birth is but
a sleep and a forgetting: |
|
The Soul that
rises with us, our life's Star, |
60 |
Hath
had elsewhere its setting, |
|
And
cometh from afar: |
|
Not
in entire forgetfulness, |
|
And
not in utter nakedness, |
|
But trailing
clouds of glory do we come |
65 |
From
God, who is our home: |
|
Heaven lies
about us in our infancy! |
|
Shades of the
prison-house begin to close |
|
Upon
the growing Boy, |
|
But he beholds
the light, and whence it flows, |
70 |
He
sees it in his joy; |
|
The Youth, who
daily farther from the east |
|
Must
travel, still is Nature's priest, |
|
And
by the vision splendid |
|
Is
on his way attended; |
75 |
At length the
Man perceives it die away, |
|
And fade into
the light of common day. |
|
|
|
Earth fills her
lap with pleasures of her own; |
|
Yearnings she
hath in her own natural kind, |
|
And, even with
something of a mother's mind, |
80 |
And
no unworthy aim, |
|
The
homely nurse doth all she can |
|
To make her
foster-child, her Inmate Man, |
|
Forget
the glories he hath known, |
|
And that
imperial palace whence he came. |
85 |
|
|
Behold the Child
among his new-born blisses, |
|
A six years'
darling of a pigmy size! |
|
See, where 'mid
work of his own hand he lies, |
|
Fretted by
sallies of his mother's kisses, |
|
With light upon
him from his father's eyes! |
90 |
See, at his
feet, some little plan or chart, |
|
Some fragment
from his dream of human life, |
|
Shaped by
himself with newly-learnèd art; |
|
A
wedding or a festival, |
|
A
mourning or a funeral; |
95 |
And
this hath now his heart, |
|
And
unto this he frames his song: |
|
Then
will he fit his tongue |
|
To dialogues of
business, love, or strife; |
|
But
it will not be long |
100 |
Ere
this be thrown aside, |
|
And
with new joy and pride |
|
The little actor
cons another part; |
|
Filling from
time to time his 'humorous stage' |
|
With all the
Persons, down to palsied Age, |
105 |
That Life brings
with her in her equipage; |
|
As
if his whole vocation |
|
Were
endless imitation. |
|
|
|
Thou, whose
exterior semblance doth belie |
|
Thy
soul's immensity; |
110 |
Thou best
philosopher, who yet dost keep |
|
Thy heritage,
thou eye among the blind, |
|
That, deaf and
silent, read'st the eternal deep, |
|
Haunted for ever
by the eternal mind,— |
|
Mighty
prophet! Seer blest! |
115 |
On
whom those truths do rest, |
|
Which we are
toiling all our lives to find, |
|
In darkness lost,
the darkness of the grave; |
|
Thou, over whom
thy Immortality |
|
Broods like the
Day, a master o'er a slave, |
120 |
A presence which
is not to be put by; |
|
To
whom the grave |
|
Is but a lonely
bed without the sense or sight |
|
Of
day or the warm light, |
|
A place of
thought where we in waiting lie; |
125 |
Thou little
Child, yet glorious in the might |
|
Of heaven-born
freedom on thy being's height, |
|
Why with such
earnest pains dost thou provoke |
|
The years to
bring the inevitable yoke, |
|
Thus blindly
with thy blessedness at strife? |
130 |
Full soon thy
soul shall have her earthly freight, |
|
And custom lie
upon thee with a weight, |
|
Heavy as frost,
and deep almost as life! |
|
|
|
O
joy! that in our embers |
|
Is
something that doth live, |
135 |
That
nature yet remembers |
|
What
was so fugitive! |
|
The thought of
our past years in me doth breed |
|
Perpetual
benediction: not indeed |
|
For that which
is most worthy to be blest— |
140 |
Delight and
liberty, the simple creed |
|
Of childhood,
whether busy or at rest, |
|
With new-fledged
hope still fluttering in his breast:— |
|
Not
for these I raise |
|
The
song of thanks and praise; |
145 |
But
for those obstinate questionings |
|
Of
sense and outward things, |
|
Fallings
from us, vanishings; |
|
Blank
misgivings of a Creature |
|
Moving about in
worlds not realized, |
150 |
High instincts
before which our mortal Nature |
|
Did tremble like
a guilty thing surprised: |
|
But
for those first affections, |
|
Those
shadowy recollections, |
|
Which,
be they what they may, |
155 |
Are yet the
fountain-light of all our day, |
|
Are yet a
master-light of all our seeing; |
|
Uphold
us, cherish, and have power to make |
|
Our noisy years seem
moments in the being |
|
Of the eternal
Silence: truths that wake, |
160 |
To
perish never: |
|
Which neither
listlessness, nor mad endeavour, |
|
Nor
Man nor Boy, |
|
Nor all that is
at enmity with joy, |
|
Can utterly
abolish or destroy! |
165 |
Hence
in a season of calm weather |
|
Though
inland far we be, |
|
Our souls have
sight of that immortal sea |
|
Which
brought us hither, |
|
Can
in a moment travel thither, |
170 |
And see the
children sport upon the shore, |
|
And hear the
mighty waters rolling evermore. |
|
|
|
Then sing, ye
birds, sing, sing a joyous song! |
|
And
let the young lambs bound |
|
As
to the tabor's sound! |
175 |
We in thought
will join your throng, |
|
Ye
that pipe and ye that play, |
|
Ye
that through your hearts to-day |
|
Feel
the gladness of the May! |
|
What though the
radiance which was once so bright |
180 |
Be now for ever
taken from my sight, |
|
Though
nothing can bring back the hour |
|
Of splendour in
the grass, of glory in the flower; |
|
We
will grieve not, rather find |
|
Strength
in what remains behind; |
185 |
In
the primal sympathy |
|
Which
having been must ever be; |
|
In
the soothing thoughts that spring |
|
Out
of human suffering; |
|
In
the faith that looks through death, |
190 |
In years that
bring the philosophic mind. |
|
|
|
And O ye
Fountains, Meadows, Hills, and Groves, |
|
Forebode not any
severing of our loves! |
|
Yet in my heart
of hearts I feel your might; |
|
I only have
relinquish'd one delight |
195 |
To live beneath
your more habitual sway. |
|
I love the
brooks which down their channels fret, |
|
Even more than
when I tripp'd lightly as they; |
|
The innocent
brightness of a new-born Day |
|
Is
lovely yet; |
200 |
The clouds that
gather round the setting sun |
|
Do take a sober
colouring from an eye |
|
That hath kept
watch o'er man's mortality; |
|
Another race
hath been, and other palms are won. |
|
Thanks to the
human heart by which we live, |
205 |
Thanks to its
tenderness, its joys, and fears, |
|
To me the
meanest flower that blows can give |
|
Thoughts that do
often lie too deep for tears. |
|