Poems New and Old by John Freeman
page 69 of 309 (22%)
page 69 of 309 (22%)
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Polished by many bodies sitting there,
Until the wood-lines flowed as clean as waves. Mine sat restless there, Or propped to stare Hugged the low kitchen with fond eyes Or tired eyes that looked at nothing at all. Or watched from the smoke rise The flame's snake-eyes, Up the black-bearded chimney leap; Then on my shoulder my dull head would drop. And half asleep I heard her creep-- Her never-singing lips shut fast, Fearing to wake me by a careless breath. Then, at last, My lids upcast, Our eyes met, I smiled and she smiled, And I shut mine again and truly slept. Was I that child Fretful, sick, wild? Was that you moving soft and soft Between the rooms if I but played at sleep? Or if I laughed, Talked, cried, or coughed, |
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