Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Pine Forest Of The Cascine Near Pisa. by Percy Bysshe Shelley
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The Pine Forest Of The Cascine Near Pisa.

    By Percy Bysshe Shelley



    Dearest, best and brightest,
    Come away,
    To the woods and to the fields!
    Dearer than this fairest day
    Which, like thee to those in sorrow,
    Comes to bid a sweet good-morrow
    To the rough Year just awake
    In its cradle in the brake.
    The eldest of the Hours of Spring,
    Into the Winter wandering,
    Looks upon the leafless wood,
    And the banks all bare and rude;
    Found, it seems, this halcyon Morn
    In February's bosom born,
    Bending from Heaven, in azure mirth,
    Kissed the cold forehead of the Earth,
    And smiled upon the silent sea,
    And bade the frozen streams be free;
    And waked to music all the fountains,
    And breathed upon the rigid mountains,
    And made the wintry world appear
    Like one on whom thou smilest, Dear.

    Radiant Sister of the Day,
    Awake! arise! and come away!
    To the wild woods and the plains,
    To the pools where winter rains
    Image all the roof of leaves,
    Where the pine its garland weaves
    Sapless, gray, and ivy dun
    Round stems that never kiss the sun -
    To the sandhills of the sea,
    Where the earliest violets be.

    Now the last day of many days,
    All beautiful and bright as thou,
    The loveliest and the last, is dead,
    Rise, Memory, and write its praise!
    And do thy wonted work and trace
    The epitaph of glory fled;
    For now the Earth has changed its face,
    A frown is on the Heaven's brow.

    We wandered to the Pine Forest
    That skirts the Ocean's foam,
    The lightest wind was in its nest,
    The tempest in its home.

    The whispering waves were half asleep,
    The clouds were gone to play,
    And on the woods, and on the deep
    The smile of Heaven lay.

    It seemed as if the day were one
    Sent from beyond the skies,
    Which shed to earth above the sun
    A light of Paradise.

    We paused amid the pines that stood,
    The giants of the waste,
    Tortured by storms to shapes as rude
    With stems like serpents interlaced.

    How calm it was - the silence there
    By such a chain was bound,
    That even the busy woodpecker
    Made stiller by her sound

    The inviolable quietness;
    The breath of peace we drew
    With its soft motion made not less
    The calm that round us grew.

    It seemed that from the remotest seat
    Of the white mountain's waste
    To the bright flower beneath our feet,
    A magic circle traced; -

    A spirit interfused around,
    A thinking, silent life;
    To momentary peace it bound
    Our mortal nature's strife; -

    And still, it seemed, the centre of
    The magic circle there,
    Was one whose being filled with love
    The breathless atmosphere.

    Were not the crocuses that grew
    Under that ilex-tree
    As beautiful in scent and hue
    As ever fed the bee?

    We stood beneath the pools that lie
    Under the forest bough,
    And each seemed like a sky
    Gulfed in a world below;

    A purple firmament of light
    Which in the dark earth lay,
    More boundless than the depth of night,
    And clearer than the day -

    In which the massy forests grew
    As in the upper air,
    More perfect both in shape and hue
    Than any waving there.

    Like one beloved the scene had lent
    To the dark water's breast
    Its every leaf and lineament
    With that clear truth expressed;

    There lay far glades and neighbouring lawn,
    And through the dark green crowd
    The white sun twinkling like the dawn
    Under a speckled cloud.

    Sweet views, which in our world above
    Can never well be seen,
    Were imaged by the water's love
    Of that fair forest green.

    And all was interfused beneath
    With an Elysian air,
    An atmosphere without a breath,
    A silence sleeping there.

    Until a wandering wind crept by,
    Like an unwelcome thought,
    Which from my mind's too faithful eye
    Blots thy bright image out.

    For thou art good and dear and kind,
    The forest ever green,
    But less of peace in S - 's mind,
    Than calm in waters, seen.



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