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Poem by Jean Ingelow


Looking Down


Mountains of sorrow, I have heard your moans,
And the moving of your pines; but we sit high
On your green shoulders, nearer stoops the sky,
And pure airs visit us from all the zones.
Sweet world beneath, too happy far to sigh,
Dost thou look thus beheld from heavenly thrones?
No; not for all the love that counts thy stones,
While sleepy with great light the valleys lie.
Strange, rapturous peace! its sunshine doth enfold
My heart; I have escaped to the days divine,
It seemeth as bygone ages back had rolled,
And all the eldest past was now, was mine;
Nay, even as if Melchizedec of old
Might here come forth to us with bread and wine. 



Jean Ingelow


Jean Ingelow's other poems:
  1. Grand Is The Leisure Of The Earth
  2. A Song in Three Parts
  3. The Beginning
  4. The Measureless Gulfs Of Air Are Full Of Thee
  5. Scholar and Carpenter


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