I.
The voice and the Peak
Far over summit and lawn,
The lone glow and long roar
Green-rushing from the rosy thrones of dawn!
II.
All night have I heard the voice
Rave over the rocky bar,
But thou wert silent in heaven,
Above thee glided the star.
III.
Hast thou no voice, O Peak,
That standest high above all?
I am the voice of the Peak,
I roar and rave, for I fall.
IV.
A thousand voices go
To North, South, East, and West;
They leave the heights and are troubled,
And moan and sink to their rest.
V.
The fields are fair beside them,
The chestnut towers in his bloom;
But theythey feel the desire of the deep
Fall, and follow their doom.
VI.
The deep has power on the height,
And the height has power on the deep;
They are raised for ever and ever,
And sink again into sleep.
VII.
Not raised for ever and ever,
But when their cycle is oer,
The valley, the voice, the peak, the star
Pass, and are found no more.
VIII.
The Peak is high and flushd
At his highest with sunrise fire;
The Peak is high, and the stars are high,
And the thought of a man is higher.
IX.
A deep below the deep,
And a height beyond the height!
Our hearing is not hearing,
And our seeing is not sight.
X.
The voice and the Peak
Far into heaven withdrawn,
The lone glow and long roar
Green-rushing from the rosy thrones of dawn!
The Voice And The Peak
Alfred Lord Tennyson
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