bowed to kiss
The dimpling waters with unbounded bliss.
Here in this Paradise of earth, where first
Wild mountain Liberty began to burst,
Once Natureâs temple rose in simple grace,
The hill her throne, the world her dwelling-place.
And where are now her lakes, so still and lone,
Her thousand streams with bending shrubs oâergrown?
Where her dark catâracts tumbling from on high,
With rainbow arch aspiring to the sky?
Her towâring pines with fadeless wreaths entwined,
Her waving alders streaming to the wind?
Nor these alone,âher own,âher favârite child,
All fire, all feeling; man untaught and wild;
Where can the lost, lone son of Nature stray?
For artâs high car is rolling on its way;
A wandârer of the world, he flies to drown
The thoughts of days gone by and pleasures flown
In the deep draught, whose dregs are death and woe,
With slaveryâs iron chain concealed below.
Once through the tangled wood, with noiseless tread
And throbbing heart, the lurking warrior sped,
Aimed his sure weapon, won the prize, and turned,
While his high heart with wild ambition burned
With song and war-whoop to his native tree,
There on its bark to carve the victory.
His all of learning did that act comprise,
But still in natureâ s volume doubly wise.
Â
The wayward stream which once, with idle bound,
Whirled on resistless in its foaming round,
Now curbed by art flows on, a watâry chain
Linking the snow-capped mountains to the main.
Where once the alder in luxuriance grew,
Or the tall pine its towering branches threw
Abroad to heaven, with dark and haughty brow,
There mark the realms of plenty smiling now;
There the full sheaf of Ceres richly glows,
And Plentyâs fountain blesses as it flows;
And man, a brute when left to wander wild,
A reckless creature, Natureâs lawless child,
What boundless streams of knowledge rolling now
From the full hand of art around him flow!
Improvement strides the surge, while from afar
Learning rolls onward in her silver car;
Freedom unfurls her banner oâer his head,
While peace sleeps sweetly on her native bed.
The Muse arises from the wild-wood glen,
And chants her sweet and hallowed song again,
As in those halcyon days, which bards have sung,
When hope was blushing, and when life was young.
Thus shall she rise, and thus her sons shall rear
Her sacred temple here, and only here,
While Percival, her loved and chosen priest,
Forever blessing, though himself unblest,
Shall fan the fire that blazes at her shrine,
And charm the ear with numbers half divine.
MARGARET FULLER (1810-1850)
Tutored by her father in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, Margaret Fuller was fluent in four foreign languages. Through her friendship with Ralph Waldo Emerson, she became editor of The Dial, a Transcendentalist magazine, and began to give public speeches in Boston on furthering womenâs education. At Horace Greeleyâs invitation, Fuller worked as a literary critic for the New York Tribune, and in 1845 she published the classic work Woman in the Nineteenth Century. Fuller spent some time in Europe, becoming the first American woman to work as a foreign correspondent. She married an Italian nobleman in 1849 and, when she was returning to the U.S. in 1850, Fuller, her husband, and their child died in a shipwreck off Fire Island, New York.
Flaxman
We deemed the secret lost, the spirit gone,
Which spake in Greek simplicity of thought,
And in the forms of gods and heroes wrought
Eternal beauty from the sculptured stone,â
A higher charm than modern culture won
With all the wealth of metaphysic lore,
Gifted to analyze, dissect, explore.
A many-colored light flows from one sun;
Art, âneath its beams, a motley thread has spun;
The prism modifies the perfect day;
But thou hast known such mediums to shun,
And cast once more on life a pure, white ray.
Absorbed in the creations of thy mind,
Forgetting daily self, my truest self I find.
Instrumental Music
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