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Home  »  An American Anthology, 1787–1900  »  1602 Solitude

Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.

By Philip HenrySavage

1602 Solitude

AS one advances up the slow ascent

Along the pathway in the woods, the trees

Change aspect, nor alone in this, but change

In stature and in power till Solitude

Seems cut out of the ancient forest. Here

Was Solitude! where man had lived of old,

Loved, serving God, and built himself a home.

Man smooths an acre on the rolling earth,

Turns up the mould and reaps the gifts of God;

Plucks down the apple from the tree, the tree

From empire in the forest, builds a home;

Turns for a bout among his brothers, wins

A sister to his wife and gets an heir;

And then as here in Solitude departs

And leaves small mark behind. The place is rare

In this high epic of the human life.

Where wildness has been wilderness shall be,

But give God time; and life is but a span,

Nine inches, while before it and behind

Stretches the garden of the cosmic gods;

For after London, England shall be wild,

And none can thaw the iceberg at the pole.

In Solitude one sees the winding trace

Of what has been a road, a block of stone

Footworn, that lies along the dim pathway

Before one old foundation; and the rest

Is freaks of grass among the rising growth

Of birch and maple that another year

Shall see almost a forest.