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The Inward Morning



By Henry David Thoreau


 


Packed in my mind lie all the clothes
Which outward nature wears,
And in its fashion's hourly change
It all things else repairs.

In vain I look for change abroad,
And can no difference find,
Till some new ray of peace uncalled
Illumes my inmost mind.

What is it gilds the trees and clouds,
And paints the heavens so gay,
But yonder fast-abiding light
With its unchanging ray?

Lo, when the sun streams through the wood,
Upon a winter's morn,
Where'er his silent beams intrude,
The murky night is gone.

How could the patient pine have known
The morning breeze would come,
Or humble flowers anticipate
The insect's noonday hum--

Till the new light with morning cheer
From far streamed through the aisles,
And nimbly told the forest trees
For many stretching miles?

I've heard within my inmost soul
Such cheerful morning news,
In the horizon of my mind
Have seen such orient hues,

As in the twilight of the dawn,
When the first birds awake,
Are heard within some silent wood,
Where they the small twigs break,

Or in the eastern skies are seen,
Before the sun appears,
The harbingers of summer heats
Which from afar he bears.


 

Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) was the son of a shopkeeper and entrepreneur who set up a pencil making business in Thoreaus youth. Both of his elder brothers were schoolteachers, who both helped to finance their younger brother through the considerable expenses of attending Harvard (about $179 a year in 1837). After graduating in 1837 he initially set up a school with his brother, but after it had to close in 1841 he turned himself to the task of the aspiring writer; before quickly learning that the income from this wasn't sufficient, and so supplemented it throughout his life both from the family business and also through work as a surveyor. His most famous book was 'Walden', a memoir of time spent near Walden Pond in a cabin that he owned. Thoreau died of tuberculosis in 1862, at the age of 44.


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