James Henry Leigh Hunt (Джеймс Генри Ли Хант)
To John Keats
'Tis well you think me truly one of those, Whose sense discerns the loveliness of things; For surely as I feel the bird that sings Behind the leaves, or dawn as it up grows, Or the rich bee rejoicing as he goes, Or the glad issue of emerging springs, Or overhead the glide of a dove's wings, Or turf, or trees, or, midst of all, repose. And surely as I feel things lovelier still, The human look, and the harmonious form Containing woman, and the smile in ill, And such a heart as Charles's, wise and warm,-- As surely as all this, I see, ev'n now, Young Keats, a flowering laurel on your brow.
James Henry Leigh Hunt’s other poems:
- Robin Hood, a Child
- A Thought or Two on Reading Pomfret’s
- Ariadne Waking
- To Robert Batty, M.D., on His Giving Me a Lock of Milton’s Hair
- The Field of Battle
Poems of other poets with the same name (Стихотворения других поэтов с таким же названием):