"SHALL HE WHO GIVES HIS DAYS TO LOW PURSUITS"

1 1 0
                                    


The following lines occur in the experimental efforts made by Wordsworth to write an autobiographical poem. They occur in one of his sister's Journals, entitled "May to December, 1802"; and were probably either dictated to her in that year, or were copied by her from some earlier fragment. They stand related to passages in The Prelude. (See vol. iii. p. 269.)--ED.


Shall he who gives his days to low pursuits

Amid the undistinguishable crowd

Of cities, 'mid the same eternal flow

Of the same objects, melted and reduced

To one identity, by differences

That have no law, no meaning, and no end,

Shall he feel yearning to those lifeless forms,

And shall we think that Nature is less kind

To those, who all day long, through a busy life,

Have walked within her sight? It cannot be.

THE POETICAL WORKS OF WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, VOL. 8 (Completed)Where stories live. Discover now