I never wholly feel that summer is high, However green the trees, or loud the birds, However movelessly eye-winking herds Stand in field ponds, or un… - Ebenezer Jones
" "I never wholly feel that summer is high,
However green the trees, or loud the birds,
However movelessly eye-winking herds
Stand in field ponds, or under large trees lie,
Till I do climb all cultured pastures by,
That hedged by hedgerows studiously fretted trim,
Smile like a lady’s face with lace laced prim,
And on some moor or hill that seeks the sky
Lonely and nakedly,—utterly lie down,
And feel the sunshine throbbing on body and limb,
My drowsy brain in pleasant drunkenness swim,
Each rising thought sink back and dreamily drown,
Smiles creep o’er my face, and smother my lips, and cloy,
Each muscle sink to itself, and separately enjoy.
About Ebenezer Jones
(20 January 1820 – 14 September 1860) was an English poet. He wrote a good deal of poetry of very unequal merit, but at his best shows a true poetic vein. He was befriended by Browning and Rossetti.
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Additional quotes by Ebenezer Jones
When the world is burning,
Fired within, yet turning Round with face unscathed;
Ere fierce flames, uprushing,
O’er all lands leap, crushing, Till earth fall, fire-swathed;
Up amidst the meadows,
Gently through the shadows, Gentle flames will glide,
Small, and blue, and golden.
Though by bard beholden,
When in calm dreams folden,— Calm his dreams will bide.