TO HENRY HOWARD, EARL OF SURREY.

Young father-poet! much in you I praise

Adventure high, romantic, vehement,

All with inviolate honour sealed and blent,

To the axe-edge that cleft your soldier bays:

Your friendships too, your follies, whims, and frays;

And, most, your verse, with strict imperious bent,

Heard sweetly as from some old harper’s tent,

And surging in the listener’s brain for days.

At Framlingham to-night, if there should be

No guest, beyond a sea-born wind that sighs,

No guard, save moonlight’s crossed and trailing spears,

And I, your pilgrim, call you, O let me

In at the gate! and smile into the eyes

That sought you, Surrey, down three hundred years.