Caged Skylark

Gerard Manley Hopkins

1844 to 1889

Poem Image
Track 1

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Or wring their barriers in bursts of fear or rage.
Though aloft on turf or perch or poor low stage,
This in drudgery, day-labouring-out life's age.
Not that the sweet-fowl, song-fowl, needs no rest—
Both sing sometimes the sweetest, sweetest spells,
Man's spirit will be flesh-bound when found at best,
For a rainbow footing it nor he for his bónes rísen.
Why, hear him, hear him babble and drop down to his nest,
Man's mounting spirit in his bone-house, mean house, dwells—
But his own nest, wild nest, no prison.
Yet both droop deadly sometimes in their cells
But uncumbered: meadow-down is not distressed
As a dare-gale skylark scanted in a dull cage
That bird beyond the remembering his free fells;

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