William Lisle Bowles (Уильям Лайл Боулз)

Sonnet 10. On Dover Cliffs

On these white cliffs, that calm above the flood
Rear their o'er-shadowing heads, and at their feet
Scarce hear the surge that has for ages beat,
Sure many a lonely wanderer has stood;
And, whilst the listed murmur met his ear,
And o'er the distant billows the still Eve
Sail'd slow, has thought of all his heart must leave
To-morrow — of the friends he lov'd most dear,—
Of social scenes, from which he wept to part:—
But if, like me, he knew how fruitless all
The thoughts, that would full fain the past recall,
Soon would he quell the risings of his heart,
And brave the wild winds and unhearing tide,
The World his country, and his GOD his guide.

William Lisle Bowles’s other poems:

  1. Sonnet 11. Written at Ostend
  2. Elegy Written at the Hot-Wells, Bristol
  3. Sonnet 13. O Time!
  4. Netley Abbey
  5. In Youth




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