OUR TRAVELLER
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If thou would'st stand on Etna's burning brow, With smoke above, and roaring flame below; And gaze adown that molten gulf reveal'd, Till thy soul shudder'd and thy senses reel'd: If thou wouldst beard Niag'ra in his pride, Or stem the billows of Propontic tide; Scale all alone some dizzy Alpine haut, And shriek "Excelsior!" among the snow: Would'st tempt all deaths, all dangers that may be— Perils by land, and perils on the sea; This vast round world, I say, if thou wouldst view it— Then, why the dickens don't you go and do it? Henry Cholmondeley-Pennell. |