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From My Arm-Chair

By Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Topics: classic

TO THE CHILDREN OF CAMBRIDGE     Who presented to me on my Seventy-second Birth-day, February 27, 1879, this Chair, made from the Wood of the Village Blacksmith's Chestnut Tree.     Am I a king, that I should call my own          This splendid ebon throne?     Or by what reason, or what right divine,          Can I proclaim it mine?     Only, perhaps, by right divine of song          It may to me belong;     Only because the spreading chestnut tree          Of old was sung by me.     Well I remember it in all its prime,          When in the summer-time     The affluent foliage of its branches made          A cavern of cool shade.     There, by the blacksmith's forge, beside the street,          Its blossoms white and sweet     Enticed the bees, until it seemed alive,          And murmured like a hive.     And when the winds of autumn, with a shout,          Tossed its great arms about,     The shining chestnuts, bursting from the sheath,          Dropped to the ground beneath.     And now some fragments of its branches bare,          Shaped as a stately chair,     Have by my hearthstone found a home at last,          And whisper of the past.     The Danish king could not in all his pride          Repel the ocean tide,     But, seated in this chair, I can in rhyme          Roll back the tide of Time.     I see again, as one in vision sees,          The blossoms and the bees,     And hear the children's voices shout and call,          And the brown chestnuts fall.     I see the smithy with its fires aglow,          I hear the bellows blow,     And the shrill hammers on the anvil beat          The iron white with heat!     And thus, dear children, have ye made for me          This day a jubilee,     And to my more than three-score years and ten          Brought back my youth again.     The heart hath its own memory, like the mind,          And in it are enshrined     The precious keepsakes, into which is wrought          The giver's loving thought.     Only your love and your remembrance could          Give life to this dead wood,     And make these branches, leafless now so long,          Blossom again in song.

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"TO THE CHILDREN OF CAMBRIDGE..."

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Author:Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

"TO THE CHILDREN OF CAMBRIDGE..." by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

About Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807–1882) was the most popular American poet of the 19th century. His narrative poems—including "Paul Revere's Ride," "Evangeline," and "The Song of Hiawatha"—made poetry accessible to a mass audience and shaped American cultural identity.

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