Poems by Victor Hugo
page 76 of 429 (17%)
page 76 of 429 (17%)
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We dare do aught becomes Old Scratch,
But like a treatment civil, So, spite of buffet, prayers, and calls-- Too late her friends to rally-- We, eighty strong, bore her along Unto the Pirate Galley. The fairer for her tears profuse, As dews refresh the flower, She is well worth three purses full, And will adorn the bower-- For vain her vow to pine and die Thus torn from her dear valley: She reigns, and we still row along The dreaded Pirate Galley. THE TURKISH CAPTIVE. _("Si je n'etait captive.")_ [IX., July, 1828.] Oh! were I not a captive, I should love this fair countree; Those fields with maize abounding, This ever-plaintive sea: I'd love those stars unnumbered, |
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