Verses and Translations by Charles Stuart Calverley
page 14 of 111 (12%)
page 14 of 111 (12%)
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"For indeed--the clocks have struck."
VOICES OF THE NIGHT. "The tender Grace of a day that is past." The dew is on the roses, The owl hath spread her wing; And vocal are the noses Of peasant and of king: "Nature" (in short) "reposes;" But I do no such thing. Pent in my lonesome study Here I must sit and muse; Sit till the morn grows ruddy, Till, rising with the dews, "Jeameses" remove the muddy Spots from their masters' shoes. Yet are sweet faces flinging Their witchery o'er me here: I hear sweet voices singing A song as soft, as clear, As (previously to stinging) A gnat sings round one's ear. |
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