Carlyle's Statue
A patch of garden by the river-side,
With seats where children cluster; to and fro
Upon the stream the fretting steamboats go,
And barges this or that way with the tide.
A Statue, with lined forehead and sad-eyed,
Rear'd 'mid the walk, sits gazing on the flow,
Beholding not its freightage, swift or slow, —
Marking but how the eternal waters glide.
Time is not. Though the wasting hours are toll'd
From this church-tower, which spoke to him of old,
When the dim street hard-by his footsteps trod.
Alike the morn, loud noon, or twilight pale,
Or when night comes, with infinite peace, to veil
The sad eyes gazing on the darkened flood.
With seats where children cluster; to and fro
Upon the stream the fretting steamboats go,
And barges this or that way with the tide.
A Statue, with lined forehead and sad-eyed,
Rear'd 'mid the walk, sits gazing on the flow,
Beholding not its freightage, swift or slow, —
Marking but how the eternal waters glide.
Time is not. Though the wasting hours are toll'd
From this church-tower, which spoke to him of old,
When the dim street hard-by his footsteps trod.
Alike the morn, loud noon, or twilight pale,
Or when night comes, with infinite peace, to veil
The sad eyes gazing on the darkened flood.
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