Poems by Hartley Coleridge With a Memoir of his Life by his Brother. In Two Volumes |
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EDWARD—CHILD AND MAN. |
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Poems by Hartley Coleridge | ||
43
XLI. EDWARD—CHILD AND MAN.
I saw thee, Edward, when thy baby criesSounded in mother's ears a swift alarm;
I saw thee cradled on thy father's arm,
When he, with many smiles and many sighs,
Guess'd in the quick gleam of thy new wak'd eyes
The inward stirrings, not matured to thought,
Not broken to the curb of must and ought,
And yet instinct with all thy destinies.
I see thee now a far experienced man,
Who from late boyhood to the rear of youth
Hast seen in many lands new forms of truth,
And haply learned with foreign eye to scan
Old England's faults; yet dost thou fondly love her,
And with a true friend's boldness, dost reprove her.
Poems by Hartley Coleridge | ||