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At Rome

By Arthur Hugh Clough

Topics: classic

O, richly soiled and richly sunned,     Exuberant, fervid, and fecund!     Is this the fixed condition     On which may Northern pilgrim come,     To imbibe thine ether-air, and sum     Thy store of old tradition?     Must we be chill, if clean, and stand     Foot-deep in dirt on classic land?     So is it: in all ages so,     And in all places man can know,     From homely roots unseen below     The stem in forest, field, and bower,     Derives the emanative power     That crowns it with the ethereal flower,     From mixtures foetid, foul, and sour     Draws juices that those petals fill.     Ah Nature, if indeed thy will     Thou ownst it, it shall not be ill!     And truly here, in this quick clime,     Where, scarcely bound by space or time,     The elements in half a day     Toss off with exquisitest play     What our cold seasons toil and grieve,     And never quite at last achieve;     Where processes, with pain, and fear,     Disgust, and horror wrought, appear     The quick mutations of a dance,     Wherein retiring but to advance,     Life, in brief interpause of death,     One moment sitting taking breath,     Forth comes again as glad as eer,     In some new figure full as fair,     Where what has scarcely ceased to be,     Instinct with newer birth we see     What dies, already, look you, lives;     In such a clime, who thinks, forgives;     Who sees, will understand; who knows,     In calm of knowledge find repose,     And thoughtful as of glory gone,     So too of more to come anon,     Of permanent existence sure,     Brief intermediate breaks endure.     O Nature, if indeed thy will,     Thou ownest it, it is not ill!     And een as oft on heathy hill,     On moorland black, and ferny fells,     Beside thy brooks and in thy dells,     Was welcomed erst the kindly stain     Of thy true earth, een so again     With resignation fair, and meet     The dirt and refuse of thy street,     My philosophic foot shall greet,     So leave but perfect to my eye     Thy columns, set against thy sky!

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"O, richly soiled and richly sunned,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Arthur Hugh Clough delivers a powerful performance in "At Rome"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:Arthur Hugh Clough

"O, richly soiled and richly sunned,..." by Arthur Hugh Clough

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Arthur Hugh Clough

About Arthur Hugh Clough

Arthur Hugh Clough (1819–1861) was an English poet whose work explores Victorian doubt and moral uncertainty. His poems "Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth" and "The Latest Decalogue" are sharp, thoughtful, and still widely anthologized.

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"Cease, empty Faith, the Spectrum saith,     I was,..."

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