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Poem by Christopher Pearse Cranch


Sonnet 47. To G.W.C.


STILL shines our August day, as calm, as bright
As when, long years ago, we sailied away
Down the blue Narrows and the widening bay
Into the wrinkling ocean's flashing light;
And the whole universe of sound and sight
Repeats the radiance of that festal day.
But for the inward eye no power can stay
The fleeting splendor of our youth's delight.
Still shines our August day, — but not for me
The old enchantment, — when, by care and sorrow
Untried, the hopeful heart was ever free
To greet the morn as herald of like morrow.
Yet shine, fair day! And let my soul from thee
Hope, faith, and strength for life's dim future borrow.



Christopher Pearse Cranch


Christopher Pearse Cranch's other poems:
  1. Sonnet 1. THE Summer goes, with all its birds and flowers
  2. A Word to Philosophers
  3. Sonnet 23. Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony
  4. Sonnet 12. The Ocean Steamer
  5. Sonnet 7. THOSE times are gone, that circle thinned away


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