This lonely hill to me was ever dear,
This hedge, which shuts from view so large a part
Of the remote horizon. As I sit
And gaze, absorbed, I in my thought conceive
The boundless spaces that beyond it range,
The silence supernatural, and rest
Profound; and for a moment I am calm.
And as I listen to the wind, that through
These trees is murmuring, its plaintive voice
I with that infinite compare;
And things eternal I recall, and all
The seasons dead, and this, that round me lives,
And utters its complaint. Thus wandering
My thought in this immensity is drowned;
And sweet to me is shipwreck on this sea.
The Infinite
Giacomo Leopardi
(1)
Poem topics: lonely, sea, silence, wind, dear, voice, sweet, moment, hedge, eternal, listen, horizon, infinite, view, gaze, large, conceive, compare, thought, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
About The Infinite
The Infinite is a poem by Giacomo Leopardi. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
Write your comment about The Infinite poem by Giacomo Leopardi
Best Poems of Giacomo Leopardi