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Poem by Richard Hovey


Philosophy


I SOMETIMES long to throw my books away
And to forget the thoughts that make me sad—
The mighty musings that have ever clad
The minds of men in chill and sombre grey.
I sometimes long to laugh out and be gay
As some blithe, thoughtless, merry-hearted lad
Or wander in the forest and be glad
Without a memory of a heavier day;
Yet when I try to turn myself apart
From all the deeper mysteries of Life
In nature-love and hate of human strife,
Still the same thoughts throng through my throbbing brain
And I arise in heaviness of heart
And turn me to my studying again.



Richard Hovey


Richard Hovey's other poems:
  1. Earth's Lyric
  2. Squab Flights
  3. Lancelot and Gawaine
  4. In Memoriam (A. H. Quint)
  5. College Days


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Edith Nesbit Philosophy ("THE sulky sage scarce condescends to see")
  • Norman Gale Philosophy ("'Tis sometimes Fortune's little joke")
  • Amy Levy Philosophy ("Ere all the world had grown so drear")
  • Ella Wilcox Philosophy ("At morn the wise man walked abroad")

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