Poems of Henry Timrod
Youth and Manhood

Henry Timr

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Another year! a short one, if it flow

Like that just past,

And I shall stand—if years can make me so—

A man at last.

Yet, while the hours permit me, I would pause

And contemplate

The lot whereto unalterable laws

Have bound my fate.

Yet, from the starry regions of my youth,

The empyreal height

Where dreams are happiness, and feeling truth,

And life delight—

From that ethereal and serene abode

My soul would gaze

Downward upon the wide and winding r

Where manhood plays;

Plays with the baubles and the gauds of earth—

Wealth, power, and fame—

Nor knows that in the twelvemonth after birth

He did the same.

Where the descent begins, through long defiles

I see them wind;

And some are looking down with hopeful smiles,

And some are—blind.

And farther on a gay and glorious green

Dazzles the sight,

While noble forms are moving o'er the scene,

Like things of light.

Towers, temples, domes of perfect symmetry

Rise brand high,

With pinnacles among the clouds; ah, me!

None touch the sky.

None pierce the pure and lofty atmosphere

Which I breathe now,

And the strong spirits that inhabit there,

Live—God sees how.

Sick of the very treasure which they heap;

Their tearless eyes

Sealed ever in a heaven-forgetting sleep,

Whose dreams are lies;

And so, a motley, unattractive throng,

They toil and plod,

Dead to the holy ecstasies of song,

To love, and God.

Dear God! if that I may not keep through life

My trust, my truth,

And that I must, in yonder endless strife,

Lose faith with youth;

If the same toil which indurates the hand

Must steel the heart,

Till, in the wonders of the ideal land,

It have no part;

Oh! take me hence! I would no longer stay

Beneath the sky;

Give me to chant one pure and deathless lay,

And let me die!

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