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Idleness

   The rain is playing its soft pleasant tune
   Fitfully on the skylight, and the shade
   Of the fast flying clouds across my book
   Passes with delicate change. My merry fire
   Sings cheerfully to itself; my musing cat
   Purrs as she wakes from her unquiet sleep,
   And looks into my face as if she felt
   Like me the gentle influence of the rain.
   Here have I sat since morn, reading sometimes,
   And sometimes listening to the faster fall
   Of the large drops, or rising with the stir
   Of an unbidden thought, have walked awhile
   With the slow steps of indolence, my room,
   And then sat down composedly again
   To my quaint book of olden poetry.
   It is a kind of idleness, I know;
   And I am said to be an idle man -
   And it is very true. I love to go
   Out in the pleasant sun, and let my eye
   Rest on the human faces that pass by,
   Each with its gay or busy interest;
   And then I muse upon their lot, and read
   Many a lesson in their changeful cast,
   And so grow kind of heart, as if the sight
   Of human beings were humanity.
   And I am better after it, and go
   More gratefully to my rest, and feel a love
   Stirring my heart to every living thing,
   And my low prayer has more humility,
   And I sink lightlier to my dreams– and this,
   ’Tis very true, is only idleness!
 
   I love to go and mingle with the young
   In the gay festal room– when every heart
   Is beating faster than the merry tune,
   And their blue eyes are restless, and their lips
   Parted with eager joy, and their round cheeks
   Flushed with the beautiful motion of the dance.
   ’Tis sweet, in the becoming light of lamps,
   To watch a brow half shaded, or a curl
   Playing upon a neck capriciously,
   Or, unobserved, to watch in its delight,
   The earnest countenance of a child. I love
   To look upon such things, and I can go
   Back to my solitude, and dream bright dreams
   For their fast coming years, and speak of them
   Earnestly in my prayer, till I am glad
   With a benevolent joy– and this, I know,
   To the world’s eye, is only idleness!
 
   And when the clouds pass suddenly away,
   And the blue sky is like a newer world,
   And the sweet growing things– forest and flower,
   Humble and beautiful alike– are all
   Breathing up odors to the very heaven -
   Or when the frost has yielded to the sun
   In the rich autumn, and the filmy mist
   Lies like a silver lining on the sky,
   And the clear air exhilarates, and life
   Simply, is luxury– and when the hush
   Of twilight, like a gentle sleep, steals on,
   And the birds settle to their nests, and stars
   Spring in the upper sky, and there is not
   A sound that is not low and musical -
   At all these pleasant seasons I go out
   With my first impulse guiding me, and take
   Woodpath, or stream, or sunny mountain side,
   And, in my recklessness of heart, stray on,
   Glad with the birds, and silent with the leaves,
   And happy with the fair and blessed world -
   And this, ’tis true, is only idleness!
 
   And I should love to go up to the sky,
   And course the heaven like stars, and float away
   Upon the gliding clouds that have no stay
   In their swift journey– and 'twould be a joy
   To walk the chambers of the deep, and tread
   The pearls of its untrodden floor, and know
   The tribes of its unfathomable depths -
   Dwellers beneath the pressure of a sea!
   And I should love to issue with the wind
   On a strong errand, and o’ersweep the earth,
   With its broad continents and islands green,
   Like to the passing of a presence on! -
   And this, ’tis true, were only idleness!
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