Charles Ives - The Housatonic at Stockbridge

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original text at lyrnow.com/1996443
Contented river! In thy dreamy realm
The cloudy willow and the plumy elm:
Thou beautiful!
From ev'ry dreamy hill
What eye but wanders with thee at thy will
Contented river!
And yet over-shy
To mask thy beauty from the eager eye;
Hast thou a thought to hide from field and town?
In some deep current of the sunlit brown
Ah! there's a restive ripple
And the swift red leaves
September's firstlings fastеr drift;
Wouldst thou away, dear stream?
Come, whispеr near!
I also of much resting have a fear:
Let me tomorrow thy companion be
By fall and shallow to the adventurous sea!
 
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Biography

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Arguably the first modernist composer, Charles Ives (1874-1954) was a solitary figure who composed in obscurity for most of his life. The son of a U.S. Army bandleader, Ives enjoyed a wildly successful career as an insurance executive. In his spare time, he composed music in a wide variety of genres that combined popular song, church hymns, military marches, and European art music in ways that used tone clusters, polytonality, and other techniques decades before they were adopted by European composers.