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Patience Taught By Nature


By Elizabeth Barrett Browning



 

"O DREARY life," we cry, "O dreary life !"
And still the generations of the birds
Sing through our sighing, and the flocks and herds
Serenely live while we are keeping strife
With Heaven's true purpose in us, as a knife
Against which we may struggle ! Ocean girds
Unslackened the dry land, savannah-swards
Unweary sweep, hills watch unworn, and rife
Meek leaves drop year]y from the forest-trees
To show, above, the unwasted stars that pass
In their old glory: O thou God of old,
Grant me some smaller grace than comes to these! -
But so much patience as a blade of grass
Grows by, contented through the heat and cold.




Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861) was an English poet who was well-known in her lifetime. For most of her life, she suffered from bad health and so spent a lot of time at home reading and writing. Her first collection of poems was published privately when she was 14. In 1844, she was introduced in writing to poet Robert Browning whom she married in secret two years later. They moved to Italy where her health improved and she continued to write - mostly about the liberal causes of her day like the restrictions women were subject to in Victorian society. Shortly before her death, she wrote The Poems Before Congress (1860) which have been acclaimed for their lyrical and powerful words.


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