The Poems of Richard Watson Gilder | ||
II
Terrace on terrace rises the farm, from meadow and winding river to forest of chestnut and pine;
There by the high-road, among the embowering maples, nestles the ancient homestead;
From each new point of vantage lovelier seems the valley, and the hill-framed sunset ever more and more moving and glorious;
But when in the thunderous city I think of the mountain farm, nothing so sweet of remembrance,—holding me as in a dream,—
As the silver note of the unseen brook, and the clanging of the cow-bells fitfully in the dark, and the deep breathing of the cows
In the night pasture.
The Poems of Richard Watson Gilder | ||