Etienne de la Boéce
I serve you not, if you I follow,
Shadow-like, o'er hill and hollow,
And bend my fancy to your leading,
All too nimble for my treading.
When the pilgrimage is done,
And we've the landscape overrun,
I am bitter, vacant, thwarted,
And your heart is unsupported.
Vainly valiant, you have
The manhood that should yours resist,
Its complement; but if I
In severe or cordial
Lead you rightly to my altar,
Where the wisest muses falter,
And worship that world-warning
Which dazzles me in midnight dark,
Equalizing small and large,
While the soul it doth surcharge,
That the poor is wealthy grown,
And the hermit never alone,
The traveller and the road seem
With the errand to be done;—That were a man's and lover's part,
That were Freedom's whitest chart.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Other author posts
Berrying
May be true what I had heard, Earth's a howling Truculent with fraud and force,Said I, strolling through the pastures, And along the riverside
Dirge
Knows he who tills this lonely To reap its scanty corn, What mystic fruit his acres At midnight and at morn
Blight
Give me truths, For I am weary of the surfaces, And die of inanition If I
The Apology
Think me not unkind and rude That I walk alone in grove and glen; I go to the god of the wood To fetch his word to men Tax not my sloth that I Fold my arms beside the brook; Each cloud that floated in the sky Writes a letter in my book