Public Domain Poetry And Stories - To A Friend by John Greenleaf Whittier
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To A Friend

    By John Greenleaf Whittier



    On her return from Europe.


    How smiled the land of France
    Under thy blue eye's glance,
    Light-hearted rover
    Old walls of chateaux gray,
    Towers of an early day,
    Which the Three Colors play
    Flauntingly over.

    Now midst the brilliant train
    Thronging the banks of Seine
    Now midst the splendor
    Of the wild Alpine range,
    Waking with change on change
    Thoughts in thy young heart strange,
    Lovely, and tender.

    Vales, soft Elysian,
    Like those in the vision
    Of Mirza, when, dreaming,
    He saw the long hollow dell,
    Touched by the prophet's spell,
    Into an ocean swell
    With its isles teeming.

    Cliffs wrapped in snows of years,
    Splintering with icy spears
    Autumn's blue heaven
    Loose rock and frozen slide,
    Hung on the mountain-side,
    Waiting their hour to glide
    Downward, storm-driven!

    Rhine-stream, by castle old,
    Baron's and robber's hold,
    Peacefully flowing;
    Sweeping through vineyards green,
    Or where the cliffs are seen
    O'er the broad wave between
    Grim shadows throwing.

    Or, where St. Peter's dome
    Swells o'er eternal Rome,
    Vast, dim, and solemn;
    Hymns ever chanting low,
    Censers swung to and fro,
    Sable stoles sweeping slow
    Cornice and column!

    Oh, as from each and all
    Will there not voices call
    Evermore back again?
    In the mind's gallery
    Wilt thou not always see
    Dim phantoms beckon thee
    O'er that old track again?

    New forms thy presence haunt,
    New voices softly chant,
    New faces greet thee!
    Pilgrims from many a shrine
    Hallowed by poet's line,
    At memory's magic sign,
    Rising to meet thee.

    And when such visions come
    Unto thy olden home,
    Will they not waken
    Deep thoughts of Him whose hand
    Led thee o'er sea and land
    Back to the household band
    Whence thou wast taken?

    While, at the sunset time,
    Swells the cathedral's chime,
    Yet, in thy dreaming,
    While to thy spirit's eye
    Yet the vast mountains lie
    Piled in the Switzer's sky,
    Icy and gleaming:

    Prompter of silent prayer,
    Be the wild picture there
    In the mind's chamber,
    And, through each coming day
    Him who, as staff and stay,
    Watched o'er thy wandering way,
    Freshly remember.

    So, when the call shall be
    Soon or late unto thee,
    As to all given,
    Still may that picture live,
    All its fair forms survive,
    And to thy spirit give
    Gladness in Heaven



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