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Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a leader of the British Romantic movement, was born...
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FURTHER READING
Poems About the Natural World
And the Intrepid Anthurium
by Pura López-Colomé
Atavism
by Elinor Wylie
Belong To
by David Baker
Butterfly Catcher
by Tina Cane
Crossings
by Ravi Shankar
Elders
by Louise Bogan
Farewell
by John Clare
February: The Boy Breughel
by Norman Dubie
Field
by Erin Belieu
Fish Fucking
by Michael Blumenthal
For-The-Spirits-Who-Have-Rounded-The-Bend IIVAQSAAT
by dg nanouk okpik
Four Poems for Robin
by Gary Snyder
God's World
by Edna St. Vincent Millay
In a Blue Wood
by Richard Levine
In Michael Robins’s class minus one
by Bob Hicok
Kentucky River Junction
by Wendell Berry
maggie and milly and molly and may
by E. E. Cummings
Naskeag
by Alfred Corn
October (section I)
by Louise Glück
Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood
by William Wordsworth
Of Many Worlds in This World
by Margaret Cavendish
Pastoral
by Jennifer Chang
Pied Beauty
by Gerard Manley Hopkins
Poppies on the Wheat
by Helen Hunt Jackson
Russian Birch
by Nathaniel Bellows
Song of Nature
by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Spontaneous Me
by Walt Whitman
The Darkling Thrush
by Thomas Hardy
The Gladness of Nature
by William Cullen Bryant
The Leaves
by Deborah Digges
The Noble Nature
by Ben Jonson
The River-Merchant's Wife: A Letter
by Ezra Pound
The Wind and the Moon
by George Macdonald
Trees
by Joyce Kilmer
Two Butterflies went out at Noon— (533)
by Emily Dickinson
What's the railroad to me?
by Henry David Thoreau
Winter Morning
by William Jay Smith
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Work Without Hope

 
by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

All Nature seems at work. Slugs leave their lair—	 
The bees are stirring—birds are on the wing—	 
And Winter, slumbering in the open air,	 
Wears on his smiling face a dream of Spring!	 
And I, the while, the sole unbusy thing,	         
Nor honey make, nor pair, nor build, nor sing.	 
 
Yet well I ken the banks where amaranths blow,	 
Have traced the fount whence streams of nectar flow.	 
Bloom, O ye amaranths! bloom for whom ye may,	 
For me ye bloom not! Glide, rich streams, away!	  
With lips unbrighten'd, wreathless brow, I stroll:	 
And would you learn the spells that drowse my soul?	 
Work without Hope draws nectar in a sieve,	 
And Hope without an object cannot live.






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