Clive Bell — Myself to Myself

It was the thrush’s song I heard To-day, in March. And you who came At life through books, whom poets stirred To love of beauty, who the name Of art revered and fancy knew From earliest days, ---- why, how should you Guess at my feelings when among The elms I heard the thrush’s song? For you the country means a mood, Recalls a poem, lay a scene; For you its beauties are more good Sometimes than paintings: it has been Music to calm or move you, still A background to your thought and will. Nothing for me the country means: It is. The thrush’s earliest song In the precocious sunshine cleans My soul of culture. Comes along The acrid smell of daffodil, Hard from the soil still wet and chill. These do not mean. I am content To look or listen, passion spent Far beyond art and thought, and free From Vanity and Jealousy, As free as flower, or bird, or tree, Not to mean anything, but be. 1901.

all Clive Bell songs all songs from 1901