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The Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods Library

Thoreau's Life & Writings: Poetry
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“Ah, 'Tis in Vain the Peaceful Din...”
by Henry D. Thoreau


Ah, ‘tis in vain the peaceful din
  That wakes the ignoble town,
Not thus did braver spirits win
  A patriot’s renown.

There is one field beside this stream,
  Wherein no foot does fall,
But yet it beareth in my dream
  A richer crop than all.

Let me believe a dream so dear,
  Some heart beat high that day,
Above the petty Province here,
  And Britain far away;

Some hero of the ancient mould,
  Some arm of knightly worth,
Of strength unbought, and faith unsold,
  Honored this spot of earth;

Who sought the prize his heart described,
  And did not ask release,
Whose free-born valor was not bribed 
  By prospect of a peace.

The men who stood on yonder height
  That day are long since gone; 
Not the same hand directs the fight
  And monumental stone.

Ye were the Grecian cities then,
  The Romes of modern birth,
Where the New England husbandmen
  Have shown a Roman worth.

In vain I search a foreign land
  To find our Bunker Hill,
And Lexington and Concord stand  
  By no Laconian rill.


A Note on the Text:

  • Source: A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers [The Writings of Henry David Thoreau (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1906) p. 15]

  • Title from first line

  • Report errors to the Curator of Collections




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