My Study

L
                              et others strive for wealth or praise1
                        
                        Who care to win ;2
                        
                        I count myself full blest, if He,3
                        
                        Who made my study fair to see,4
                        
                        Grant me but length of quiet days5
                        
                        To muse therein.6
                        Its walls, with peach and cherry clad,7
                        
                        From yonder wold8
                        
                        Unbosomed, seem as if thereon9
                        
                        September sunbeams ever shone ;10
                        
                        They make the air look warm and glad11
                        
                        When winds are cold.12
                        Around its door a clematis13
                        
                        Her arms doth tie ;14
                        
                        Through leafy lattices I view15
                        
                        Its endless corridors of blue16
                        
                        Curtained with clouds ;  its ceiling is17
                        
                        The marbled sky.18
                        
A verdant carpet smoothly laid19
                        
                        Doth oft invite20
                        
                        My silent steps ;  thereon the sun21
                        
                        With silver thread of dew hath spun22
                        
                        Devices rare—the warp of shade,23
                        
                        The weft of light.24
                        Here dwell my chosen books, whose leaves25
                        
                        With healing breath26
                        
                        The ache of discontent assuage,27
                        
                        And speak from each illumined page28
                        
                        The patience that my soul reprieves29
                        
                        From inward death ;30
                        Some perish with a season’d wind, 31
                        
                        And some endure ;32
                        
                        One robes itself in snow, and one33
                        
                        In raiment of the rising sun34
                        
                        Bordered with gold ;  in all I find35
                        
                        God’s signature.36
                        As on my grassy couch I lie,37
                        
                        From hedge and tree38
                        
                        Musicians pipe ;  or if the heat39
                        
                        Subdue the birds, one crooneth sweet40
                        
                        Whose labour is a lullaby—41
                        
                        The slumbrous bee.42
                        
The sun my work doth overlook43
                        
                        With searching light ;44
                        
                        The serious moon, the flickering star,45
                        
                        My midnight lamp and candle are ;46
                        
                        A soul unhardened is the book47
                        
                        Wherein I write.48
                        There labouring, my heart is eased49
                        
                        Of every care ;50
                        
                        Yet often wonderstruck I stand,51
                        
                        With earnest gaze but idle hand,52
                        
                        Abashed—for God Himself is pleased53
                        
                        To labour there.54
                        Ashamed my faultful task to spell,55
                        
                        I watch how grows56
                        
                        The Master’s perfect colour-scheme57
                        
                        Of sunset, or His simpler dream58
                        
                        Of moonlight, or that miracle59
                        
                        We name a rose.60
                        Dear Earth, one thought alone doth grieve—61
                        
                        The tender dread62
                        
                        Of parting from thee ;  as a child,63
                        
                        Who painted while his father smiled,64
                        
                        Then watched him paint, is loth of leave65
                        
                        And go to bed.66