Select Poems of Sidney Lanier by Sidney Lanier
page 143 of 175 (81%)
page 143 of 175 (81%)
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the intensity and the breadth of Lanier's love of nature in general.
President Gates gives a separate section to Lanier's love of trees and plant-life; and, after quoting some lines on the soothing and inspiring companionship of trees, thus speaks of our Ballad: "This ministration of trees to a mind and heart `forspent with shame and grief' finds its culmination in the pathetic lines upon that olive-garden near Jerusalem, which to those of us who have sat within its shade must always seem the most sacred spot on earth. The almost mystic exaltation of the power of poetic sympathy which inspired these intense lines, `Into the Woods my Master went', may impair their religious effect for many devout souls. But to many others this short poem will express most wonderfully that essential human-heartedness in the Son of Man, our Divine Saviour, which made Him one with us in His need of the quiet, sympathetic ministrations of nature -- perhaps the heart of the reason why this olive-grove was `the place where He was wont to go' for prayer." See St. Luke 22:39. For Lanier's other poems on Christ see `Introduction', p. xxxvii f. [Part III]. Sunrise In my sleep I was fain of their fellowship, fain [1] Of the live-oak, the marsh, and the main. |
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