AN HOUR ON THE CLIFF.
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For there, 'twixt the black walls uprising, |
That is thoroughly spirited, and there are one or two other poems which are more than spirited, which have a real grandeur of tone in them. But for the most part, Mr. Bourdillon's promise consists in the clear and beautiful terseness with which he can catch the essence of a transient shade of thought or feeling, and chisel it out in words which savor of a common origin with the purest sentiment.
From Macmillan's Magazine.
AN HOUR ON THE CLIFF |
"Who can strive always? easier to lie down
It grew till forth it drove me to the heights
All seems in harmony — sea, land, and sky —
Not with the future lies my grief, I said;
Then I can dream, as happy as a child,
It is the past I cannot, dare not meet.
So I come out upon this cliff to-day
Close to the cliff's edge, that my eye may sweep |