Matthew Arnold

Parting

Ye storm-winds of Autumn  
     Who rush by, who shake  
     The window, and ruffle  
     The gleam-lighted lake;  
     Who cross to the hill-side          
     Thin-sprinkled with farms,  
     Where the high woods strip sadly  
     Their yellowing arms;—  
       Ye are bound for the mountains—  
     Ah, with you let me go        
     Where your cold distant barrier,  
     The vast range of snow,  
     Through the loose clouds lifts dimly  
     Its white peaks in air—  
     How deep is their stillness!  
     Ah! would I were there!  
 
   But on the stairs what voice is this I hear,  
 Buoyant as morning, and as morning clear?  
 Say, has some wet bird-haunted English lawn  
 Lent it the music of its trees at dawn?        
 Or was it from some sun-fleck’d mountain-brook  
 That the sweet voice its upland clearness took?  
       Ah! it comes nearer—  
       Sweet notes, this way!  
 
     Hark! fast by the window    
     The rushing winds go,  
     To the ice-cumber’d gorges,  
     The vast seas of snow.  
     There the torrents drive upward  
     Their rock-strangled hum,    
     There the avalanche thunders  
     The hoarse torrent dumb.  
     —I come, O ye mountains!  
     Ye torrents, I come!  
 
But who is this, by the half-open’d door,    
Whose figure casts a shadow on the floor?  
The sweet blue eyes—the soft, ash-colour’d hair—  
The cheeks that still their gentle paleness wear—  
The lovely lips, with their arch smile, that tells  
The unconquer’d joy in which her spirit dwells—  
       Ah! they bend nearer—  
       Sweet lips, this way!  
 
     Hark! the wind rushes past us—  
     Ah! with that let me go  
     To the clear waning hill-side
     Unspotted by snow,  
     There to watch, o’er the sunk vale,  
     The frore mountain wall,  
     Where the nich’d snow-bed sprays down  
     Its powdery fall.    
     There its dusky blue clusters  
     The aconite spreads;  
     There the pines slope, the cloud-strips  
     Hung soft in their heads.  
     No life but, at moments,    
     The mountain-bee’s hum.  
     —I come, O ye mountains!  
     Ye pine-woods, I come!  
 
     Forgive me! forgive me!  
       Ah, Marguerite, fain    
     Would these arms reach to clasp thee:—  
       But see! ’tis in vain.  
 
     In the void air towards thee  
       My strain’d arms are cast.  
     But a sea rolls between us—    
       Our different past.  
 
     To the lips, ah! of others,  
       Those lips have been prest,  
     And others, ere I was,  
       Were clasp’d to that breast;    
 
     Far, far from each other  
       Our spirits have grown.  
     And what heart knows another?  
       Ah! who knows his own?  
 
     Blow, ye winds! lift me with you!  
       I come to the wild.  
     Fold closely, O Nature!  
       Thine arms round thy child.  
 
     To thee only God granted  
       A heart ever new:  
     To all always open;  
       To all always true.  
 
     Ah, calm me! restore me!  
       And dry up my tears  
     On thy high mountain platforms,  
       Where Morn first appears,  
 
     Where the white mists, for ever,  
       Are spread and upfurl’d;  
     In the stir of the forces  
       Whence issued the world.
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