paroles de chanson Ode On a Grecian Urn - Richard Mitchley
Thou
still
unravish'd
bride
of
quietness,
Thou
foster-child
of
silence
and
slow
time,
Sylvan
historian,
who
canst
thus
express
A
flowery
tale
more
sweetly
than
our
rhyme:
What
leaf-fring'd
legend
haunts
about
thy
shape
Of
deities
or
mortals,
or
of
both,
In
Tempe
or
the
dales
of
Arcady?
What
men
or
gods
are
these?
What
maidens
loth?
What
mad
pursuit?
What
struggle
to
escape?
What
pipes
and
timbrels?
What
wild
ecstasy?
Heard
melodies
are
sweet,
but
those
unheard
Are
sweeter;
therefore,
ye
soft
pipes,
play
on;
Not
to
the
sensual
ear,
but,
more
endear'd,
Pipe
to
the
spirit
ditties
of
no
tone:
Fair
youth,
beneath
the
trees,
thou
canst
not
leave
Thy
song,
nor
ever
can
those
trees
be
bare;
Bold
Lover,
never,
never
canst
thou
kiss,
Though
winning
near
the
goal
yet,
do
not
grieve;
She
cannot
fade,
though
thou
hast
not
thy
bliss,
For
ever
wilt
thou
love,
and
she
be
fair!
Ah,
happy,
happy
boughs!
that
cannot
shed
Your
leaves,
nor
ever
bid
the
Spring
adieu;
And,
happy
melodist,
unwearied,
For
ever
piping
songs
for
ever
new;
More
happy
love!
more
happy,
happy
love!
For
ever
warm
and
still
to
be
enjoy'd,
For
ever
panting,
and
for
ever
young;
All
breathing
human
passion
far
above,
That
leaves
a
heart
high-sorrowful
and
cloy'd,
A
burning
forehead,
and
a
parching
tongue.
Who
are
these
coming
to
the
sacrifice?
To
what
green
altar,
O
mysterious
priest,
Lead'st
thou
that
heifer
lowing
at
the
skies,
And
all
her
silken
flanks
with
garlands
drest?
What
little
town
by
river
or
sea
shore,
Or
mountain-built
with
peaceful
citadel,
Is
emptied
of
this
folk,
this
pious
morn?
And,
little
town,
thy
streets
for
evermore
Will
silent
be;
and
not
a
soul
to
tell
Why
thou
art
desolate,
can
e'er
return.
O
Attic
shape!
Fair
attitude!
with
brede
Of
marble
men
and
maidens
overwrought,
With
forest
branches
and
the
trodden
weed;
Thou,
silent
form,
dost
tease
us
out
of
thought
As
doth
eternity:
Cold
Pastoral!
When
old
age
shall
this
generation
waste,
Thou
shalt
remain,
in
midst
of
other
woe
Than
ours,
a
friend
to
man,
to
whom
thou
say'st,
"Beauty
is
truth,
truth
beauty,—that
is
all
Ye
know
on
earth,
and
all
ye
need
to
know."
1 John Keats - An Introduction
2 Ode On a Grecian Urn
3 On Seeing the Elgin Marbles for the First Time
4 On a Picture of Leander
5 Ode to a Nightingale
6 Song - I Had a Dove
7 A Draught of Sunshine
8 On The Grasshopper And Cricket
9 The Human Seasons
10 In Drear Nighted December
11 The Day Is Gone and All Its Sweets Are Gone
12 Hither Hither Love
13 Meg Merrilies
14 Dawlish Fair
15 Happy Is England
16 Teignmouth
17 Lines Written in the Highlands After a Visit to Burn's Country
18 Lines On the Mermaid Tavern
19 To One Who Has Been Long in City Pent
20 A Party of Lovers
21 Sharing Eve's Apple
22 Think of It Not Sweet One
23 How Many Bards Gild the Lapses of Time
24 This Living Hand
25 If By Dull Rhymes Our English Must Be Chained
26 Written On A Summer Evening
27 Bright Star
28 On the Sea
29 To the Nile
30 Robin Hood
31 When I Have Fears
32 To a Friend Who Sent Me Roses
33 O Solitude If I Must With Thee Dwell
34 Mrs Reynold's Cat
35 Farey Songs
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