The Country Life

Not what we would, but what we must, Makes up the sum of living; Heaven is both more and less than just In taking and in giving. Swords cleave to hands that sought the plough, And laurels miss the soldier’s brow. Me, whom the city holds, whose feet Have worn its stony highways, Familiar with its loneliest street— Its ways were never my ways. My cradle was beside the sea, And there, I hope, my grave will be. Old homestead! In that old, gray town, Thy vane is seaward blowing, The slip of garden stretches down To where the tide is flowing: Below they lie, their sails all furled, The ships that go about the world. Dearer that little country house, Inland, with pines beside it; Some peach-trees, with unfruitful boughs, A well, with weeds to hide it: No flowers, or only such as rise Self-sown, poor things, which all despise. Dear country home! Can I forget The least of thy sweet trifles? The window-vines that clamber yet, Whose bloom the bee still rifles? The roadside blackberries, growing ripe, And in the woods the Indian Pipe? Happy the man who tills his field, Content with rustic labor; Earth does to him her fulness yield, Hap what may to his neighbor. Well days, sound nights, oh, can there be A life more rational and free? Dear country life of child and man! For both the best, the strongest, That with the earliest race began, And hast outlived the longest: Their cities perished long ago; Who the first farmers were we know. Perhaps our Babels too will fall; If so, no lamentations, For Mother Earth will shelter all, And feed the unborn nations; Yes, and the swords that menace now, Will then be beaten to the plough.

Collection: 
Sub Title: 
Poems of Home: V. The Home

More from Poet

  • [April, 1861] men of the North and West, Wake in your might. Prepare, as the rebels have done, For the fight! You cannot shrink from the test; Rise! Men of the North and West! They have torn down your banner of stars; They have trampled the laws; They have stifled the freedom they...

  • Not what we would, but what we must, Makes up the sum of living; Heaven is both more and less than just In taking and in giving. Swords cleave to hands that sought the plough, And laurels miss the soldier’s brow. Me, whom the city holds, whose feet Have worn its stony highways, Familiar...

  • There are gains for all our losses, There are balms for all our pain, But when youth, the dream, departs, It takes something from our hearts, And it never comes again. We are stronger, and are better, Under manhood’s sterner reign; Still we feel that something sweet Followed youth, with...

  • The life of man Is an arrow’s flight, Out of darkness Into light, And out of light Into darkness again; Perhaps to pleasure, Perhaps to pain! There must be Something, Above, or below; Somewhere unseen A mighty Bow, A Hand that tires not, A sleepless Eye That sees the arrows Fly...

  • Last night, when my tired eyes were shut with sleep, I saw the one I love, and heard her speak,— Heard, in the listening watches of the night, The sweet words melting from her sweeter lips: But what she said, or seemed to say, to me I have forgotten, though, till morning broke, I kept repeating...