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Rachel

By Matthew Arnold

Topics: classic

I     In paris all lookd hot and like to fade.     Brown in the garden of the Tuileries,     Brown with September, droopd the chestnut-trees.     Twas dawn; a brougham rolld through the streets, and made     Halt at the white and silent colonnade     Of the French Theatre. Worn with disease,     Rachel, with eyes no gazing can appease,     Sate in the brougham, and those blank walls surveyd.     She follows the gay world, whose swarms have fled     To Switzerland, to Baden, to the Rhine;     Why stops she by this empty play-house drear?     Ah, where the spirit its highest life hath led,     All spots, matchd with that spot, are less divine;     And Rachels Switzerland, her Rhine, is here!     II     Unto a lonely villa in a dell     Above the fragrant warm Provencal shore     The dying Rachel in a chair they bore     Up the steep pine-plumed paths of the Estrelle,     And laid her in a stately room, where fell     The shadow of a marble Muse of yore     The rose-crownd queen of legendary lore,     Polymnia, full on her death-bed. Twas well!     The fret and misery of our northern towns,     In this her lifes last day, our poor, our pain,     Our jangle of false wits, our climates frowns,     Do for this radiant Greek-sould artist cease;     Sole object of her dying eyes remain     The beauty and the glorious art of Greece.     III     Sprung from the blood of Israels scatterd race,     At a mean inn in German Aarau born,     To forms from antique Greece and Rome uptorn,     Trickd out with a Parisian speech and face,     Imparting life renewd, old classic grace;     Then soothing with thy Christian strain forlorn,     A-Kempis! her departing soul outworn,     While by her bedside Hebrew rites have place     Ah, not the radiant spirit of Greece alone     She had one power, which made her breast its home!     In her, like us, there clashd, contending powers,     Germany, France, Christ, Moses, Athens, Rome.     The strife, the mixture in her soul, are ours;     Her genius and her glory are her own.

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"I..." by Matthew Arnold

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Matthew Arnold

About Matthew Arnold

Matthew Arnold (1822–1888) was an English poet and critic whose poems "Dover Beach" and "The Scholar Gipsy" explore Victorian doubt and the search for meaning. His critical work "Culture and Anarchy" (1869) remains influential in literary and cultural studies.

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