Poems Chiefly from Manuscript by John Clare
page 55 of 275 (20%)
page 55 of 275 (20%)
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Hastening to the woods to bed.
Cooing sits the lonely dove, Calling home her absent love. With "Kirchup! Kirchup!" mong the wheats Partridge distant partridge greets; Beckoning hints to those that roam, That guide the squandered covey home. Swallows check their winding flight, And twittering on the chimney light. Round the pond the martins flirt, Their snowy breasts bedaubed with dirt, While the mason, neath the slates, Each mortar-bearing bird awaits: By art untaught, each labouring spouse Curious daubs his hanging house. Bats flit by in hood and cowl; Through the barn-hole pops the owl; From the hedge, in drowsy hum, Heedless buzzing beetles bum, Haunting every bushy place, Flopping in the labourer's face. Now the snail hath made its ring; And the moth with snowy wing Circles round in winding whirls, Through sweet evening's sprinkled pearls, On each nodding rush besprent; Dancing on from bent to bent; Now to downy grasses clung, Resting for a while he's hung; |
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