Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Robert Louis Stevenson - To Mrs. MacmarlandRobert Louis Stevenson - To Mrs. Macmarland
Work rating: Low


IN Schnee der Alpen - so it runs To those divine accords - and here We dwell in Alpine snows and suns, A motley crew, for half the year: A motley crew, we dwell to taste - A shivering band in hope and fear - That sun upon the snowy waste, That Alpine ether cold and clear. Up from the laboured plains, and up From low sea-levels, we arise To drink of that diviner cup The rarer air, the clearer skies; For, as the great, old, godly King From mankind`s turbid valley cries, So all we mountain-lovers sing: I to the hills will lift mine eyes. The bells that ring, the peaks that climb, The frozen snow`s unbroken curd Might yet revindicate in rhyme The pauseless stream, the absent bird. In vain - for to the deeps of life You, lady, you my heart have stirred; And since you say you love my life, Be sure I love you for the word. Of kindness, here I nothing say - Such loveless kindnesses there are In that grimacing, common way, That old, unhonoured social war. Love but my dog and love my love, Adore with me a common star - I value not the rest above The ashes of a bad cigar.
Source

The script ran 0.001 seconds.