Henry Charles Beeching, ed. (1859–1919). Lyra Sacra: A Book of Religious Verse. 1903.
By Robert Louis Stevenson (18501894)The House Beautiful
A naked house, a naked moor, | |
A shivering pool before the door. | |
A garden bare of flowers and fruit, | |
And poplars at the garden foot: | |
Such is the place that I live in, | 5 |
Bleak without and bare within. | |
Yet shall your ragged moor receive | |
The incomparable pomp of eve, | |
And the cold glories of the dawn | |
Behind your shivering trees be drawn; | 10 |
And when the wind from place to place | |
Doth the unmoored cloud-galleons chase, | |
Your garden gloom and gleam again, | |
With leaping sun, with glancing rain. | |
Here shall the wizard moon ascend | 15 |
The heavens, in the crimson end | |
Of day’s declining splendour; here | |
The army of the stars appear. | |
The neighbour hollows, dry or wet, | |
Spring shall with tender flowers beset; | 20 |
And oft the morning muser see | |
Larks rising from the broomy lea, | |
And every fairy wheel and thread | |
Of cobweb dew-bediamonded. | |
When daisies go, shall winter-time | 25 |
Silver the simple grass with rime; | |
Autumnal frosts enchant the pool, | |
And make the cart-ruts beautiful; | |
And when snow-bright the moor expands, | |
How shall your children clap their hands! | 30 |
To make this earth, our hermitage, | |
A cheerful and a changeful page, | |
God’s bright and intricate device | |
Of days and seasons doth suffice. | |