Hunt and Lee, comps. The Book of the Sonnet. 1867.
III. To Jenny LindHenry Theodore Tuckerman (18131871)
A
I hear thee warble: ’t is as if a bird
By intuition human strains had caught,
But whose pure breast no kindred feeling stirred:
Thy native song the hushed arena fills,
So wildly plaintive that I seem to stand
Alone, and see, from off the circling hills,
The bright horizon of the North expand!
High art is thus intact; and matchless skill
Born of intelligence and self-control,—
The graduated tone and perfect trill
Prove a restrained, but not a frigid soul;
Thine finds expression in such generous deeds,
That music from thy lips for human sorrow pleads!