The world's great ways unclose
Through little wooded hills:
An air that stirs and stills,
Dies sighing where it rose
Or flies to sigh again
In elms, whose stately rows
Receive the summer rain,
And clouds, clouds, clouds go by,
A drifting cavalry,
In squadrons that disperse
And troops that reassemble
And now they pass and now
Their glittering wealth disburse
On tufted grass a-tremble
And lately leafing bough.
Thus through the shining day
We'll love or pass away
Light hours in golden sleep,
With clos'd half-sentient eyes
And lids the light comes through,
As sheep and flowers do
Who no new toils devise,
While shining insects creep
About us where we lie
Beneath a pleasant sky,
In fields no trouble fills,
Whence, as the traveller goes,
The world's great ways unclose
Through little wooded hills.
Song: The Holiday
Edward Shanks
(1)
Poem topics: away, rain, rose, sky, sleep, summer, grass, wealth, receive, sheep, golden, beneath, trouble, Valentine's Day, light, love, world, I love you, great, shining, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
About Song: The Holiday
Song: The Holiday is a poem by Edward Shanks. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
Write your comment about Song: The Holiday poem by Edward Shanks
Best Poems of Edward Shanks