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Poem
January 12, 1819
The Rhode Island American, And General Advertiser
Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island
What is this article about?
The poem celebrates the happiest man as one content and free from vain desires and fears, living peacefully in rural shades away from cities, courts, and mankind, observing the misguided world from afar.
OCR Quality
95%
Excellent
Full Text
THE HAPPY MAN.
BY LORD LANSDOWNE.
Happy the man, of mortals happiest he,
Whose quiet mind from vain desires is free,
Whom neither hopes deceive, nor fears torment,
But lives at peace within himself, content
In thought, or act, accountable to none
But to himself and to the gods alone.
O sweetness of content! Seraphick joy.
That nothing wanting, nothing can destroy!
Where dwells this peace, this freedom of the mind?
Where but in shades, remote from human kind;
In flow'ry vales, where nymphs and shepherds meet,
But never comes within the palace-gate.
Farewell, then, cities, courts and camps, farewell,
Welcome, ye groves, here let me ever dwell,
From care, from business, and mankind remove,
All but the Muses, and inspiring love.
How sweet the morn! How gentle is the night!
How calm the evening; and the noon how bright;
From hence, as from a hill, I view below
The crowded world, that like some wood does show,
Where sev'ral wand'rers travel day and night
Through sev'ral paths, and none are in the right.
BY LORD LANSDOWNE.
Happy the man, of mortals happiest he,
Whose quiet mind from vain desires is free,
Whom neither hopes deceive, nor fears torment,
But lives at peace within himself, content
In thought, or act, accountable to none
But to himself and to the gods alone.
O sweetness of content! Seraphick joy.
That nothing wanting, nothing can destroy!
Where dwells this peace, this freedom of the mind?
Where but in shades, remote from human kind;
In flow'ry vales, where nymphs and shepherds meet,
But never comes within the palace-gate.
Farewell, then, cities, courts and camps, farewell,
Welcome, ye groves, here let me ever dwell,
From care, from business, and mankind remove,
All but the Muses, and inspiring love.
How sweet the morn! How gentle is the night!
How calm the evening; and the noon how bright;
From hence, as from a hill, I view below
The crowded world, that like some wood does show,
Where sev'ral wand'rers travel day and night
Through sev'ral paths, and none are in the right.
What sub-type of article is it?
Ode
Pastoral
What themes does it cover?
Moral Virtue
Nature Seasons
Satire Society
What keywords are associated?
Happy Man
Contentment
Nature Retreat
Society Critique
Vain Desires
Seraphick Joy
Lord Lansdowne
What entities or persons were involved?
By Lord Lansdowne.
Poem Details
Title
The Happy Man.
Author
By Lord Lansdowne.
Form / Style
Rhymed Couplets
Key Lines
Happy The Man, Of Mortals Happiest He,
Whom Neither Hopes Deceive, Nor Fears Tor Ment,
O Sweetness Of Content! Seraphick Joy.
Farewell, Then, Cities, Courts And Camps, Fare Well,
Welcome, Ye Groves, Here Let Me Ever Dwell,