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Lines Written In The Highlands After A Visit To Burns's Country

By John Keats

Topics: classic

There is a charm in footing slow across a silent plain,     Where patriot battle has been fought, where glory had the gain;     There is a pleasure on the heath where Druids old have been,     Where mantles grey have rustled by and swept the nettles green;     There is a joy in every spot made known by times of old,     New to the feet, although each tale a hundred times be told;     There is a deeper joy than all, more solemn in the heart,     More parching to the tongue than all, of more divine a smart,     When weary steps forget themselves upon a pleasant turf,     Upon hot sand, or flinty road, or sea-shore iron scurf,     Toward the castle or the cot, where long ago was born     One who was great through mortal days, and died of fame unshorn.     Light heather-bells may tremble then, but they are far away;     Wood-lark may sing from sandy fern, the Sun may hear this lay;     Runnels may kiss the grass on shelves and shallows clear,     But their low voices are not heard, though come on travels drear;     Blood-red the Sun may set behind the black mountain peaks;     Blue tides may sluice and drench their time in caves and weedy creeks;     Eagles may seem to sleep wing-side upon the air;     Ring-dove may fly convuls'd across to some high-cedar'd lair;     But the forgotten eye is still fast lidded to the ground,     As Palmer's, that with weariness, mid-desert shrine hath found.     At such a time the soul's a child, in childhood is the brain;     Forgotten is the worldly heart alone, it beats in vain.     Aye, if a madman could have leave to pass a healthful day     To tell his forehead's swoon and faint when first began decay,     He might make tremble many a one whose spirit had gone forth     To find a Bard's low cradle-place about the silent North!     Scanty the hour and few the steps, because a longer stay     Would bar return, and make a man forget his mortal way:     O horrible! to lose the sight of well remember'd face,     Of Brother's eyes, of Sister's brow constant to every place;     Filling the air, as on we move, with portraiture intense;     More warm than those heroic tints that pain a painter's sense,     When shapes of old come striding by, and visages of old,     Locks shining black, hair scanty grey, and passions manifold.     No, no, that horror cannot be, for at the cable's length     Man feels the gentle anchor pull and gladdens in its strength:     One hour, half-idiot, he stands by mossy waterfall,     But in the very next he reads his soul's memorial:     He reads it on the mountain's height, where chance he may sit down     Upon rough marble diadem that hill's eternal crown.     Yet be his anchor e'er so fast, room is there for a prayer     That man may never lose his mind on mountains black and bare;     That he may stray league after league some great birth-place to find     And keep his vision clear from speck, his inward sight unblind.

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"There is a charm in footing slow across a silent plain,..."

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Author:John Keats

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"There is a charm in footing slow across a silent p..." by John Keats

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John Keats

About John Keats

John Keats (1795–1821) was an English Romantic poet whose odes—"Ode to a Nightingale," "Ode on a Grecian Urn," "To Autumn"—are among the most celebrated in the language. Despite dying of tuberculosis at 25, he produced work of extraordinary sensory richness and philosophical depth.

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