FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   >>  
d a single word. Mum as the grave! Minds only his own affairs, Goes out and in, And keeps himself upstairs With his violin. Mum did I say? And yet That talking smile You never can forget, Is all the while Full of such sweet reproofs The darkest day, Like morning on the roofs In flush of May. Like autumn on the hills; At four o'clock The sun like a herdsman spills For drove and flock Peace with their provender, And they are fed. The day without a stir Lies warm and red. Ah, sir, the summer land For me! That is Like living in God's hand, Compared to this. His smile so quiet and deep Reminds me of it. I see it in my sleep, And so I love it. An anarchist, say some; But tush, say I, When a man's heart is plumb, Can his life be awry? Better than charity And bigger too, That heart. You've seen the sea? Of course. To you 'T is common enough, no doubt. But here in town, With God's world all shut out, Save the leaden frown Of the sky, a slant of rain, And a straggling star, Such memories remain The wonders they are. Once at the Isles of Shoals, And it was June . . . Now hear me dote! He strolls Across my noon, Like the sun that day, where sleeps My soul; his gaze Goes glimmering down my deeps Of yesterdays, Searching and searching, till Its light consumes The reluctant shapes that fill Those purple glooms. Let others applaud, defame, And the noise die down; His voice saying your name, Is enough renown. Too patient pitiful, Too fierce at wrong, To patronize the dull, Or praise the strong. And yet he has a soul Of wrath, though pent Even when that white ghoul Comes for his rent. The landlord? Hush! My God! I think the walls Take notes to help him prod Us up. He galls My very soul to strife, With his death's-head face. He is foul too in his life, Some hid disgrace, Some secret thing he does, I warrant you, For all his cheek to us Is shaved so blue. He takes good care (by the shade Of seven wives!) That the undertaker's trade He lives by thrives. Nor chick nor child has he. So servile smug, With that cringe in his knee,-- God curse his lug! But him, you should have seen Him yesterday; The landlord's smirk turned green At his smile. The way He served that bloodless fish, Were like to freeze him. But meeting elsewhere, pish! He never sees him. Yet such a gentleman, So sure and slow. The vilest harridan Is not too low, If
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   >>  



Top keywords:

landlord

 
pitiful
 

applaud

 
defame
 

glooms

 

purple

 
reluctant
 

consumes

 

shapes

 

patronize


strong

 
praise
 

fierce

 

patient

 

renown

 

cringe

 

servile

 
thrives
 

bloodless

 

freeze


served

 

yesterday

 

turned

 

undertaker

 

meeting

 
vilest
 
disgrace
 

secret

 
strife
 

harridan


shaved
 

gentleman

 

warrant

 

remain

 
provender
 

herdsman

 

spills

 

Compared

 
Reminds
 

living


summer

 
affairs
 

violin

 

upstairs

 

single

 
talking
 

morning

 
autumn
 

darkest

 

reproofs