[Page 15]

ON ENTERING SWITZERLAND.

1 Languid, and sad, and slow, from day to day
2 I journey on, yet pensive turn to view,
3 Where the rich landscape gleams with softer hue,
4 The streams, and vales, and hills, that steal away. [Page 16]
5 So fares it with the children of the earth:
6 For when life's goodly prospect opens round,
7 Their spirits burn to tread that fairy ground,
8 Where every vale sounds to the pipe of mirth.
9 But them, alas! the dream of youth beguiles,
10 And soon a longing look, like me, they cast
11 Back on the mountains of the morning past:
12 Yet Hope still beckons us, and beckoning smiles,
13 And to a brighter world her view extends,
14 When earth's long darkness on her path descends.

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Title (in Source Edition): ON ENTERING SWITZERLAND.
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Genres: sonnet

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Bowles, William Lisle, 1762-1850. The Poetical Works of William Lisle Bowles, Vol. I. With Memoir, Critical Dissertation, and Explanatory Notes by George Gilfillan. Edinburgh: James Nichol, 9 North Bank Street..., 1855, pp. 15-16.  (Page images digitized from a copy held at the University of California Libraries.)

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Other works by William Lisle Bowles