Beneath a fair but fiery crown:
Its witchery broods o er earth and skies,
Fills with divine amenities
The bland, blue spaces of the air,
And smiles with looks of drowsy cheer
Mid hollows of the brown-hued hills;
And oft, in tongues of tinkling rills,
A softer, homelier utterance finds
Than that which haunts the lingering winds!
I love midsummer s azure deep,
Whereon the huge white clouds, asleep,
Scarce move through lengths of tranced hours;
Some, raised in forms of giant towers
Dumb Babels, with ethereal stairs
Scaling the vast height unawares
What mocking spirit, ether-born,
Hath built those transient spires in scorn,
And reared towards the topmost sky
Their unsubstantial fantasy!
Some stretched in tenuous arcs of light
Athwart the airy infinite,
Far glittering up yon fervid dome,
And lapped by cloudland s misty foam,
Whose wreaths of fine sun-smitten spray
Melt in a burning haze away;
Some throned in heaven s serenest smiles,
Pure-hued, and calm as fairy isles,
Girt by the tides of soundless seas
The heavens benign Hesperides.
I love midsummer uplands, free
To the bold raids of breeze and bee,
Where, nested warm in yellowing grass,
Page:Southern Life in Southern Literature.djvu/426
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SOUTHERN LIFE IN SOUTHERN LITERATURE