The later poems of John Clare 1837-1864 ... General editor Eric Robinson: Edited by Eric Robinson and David Powell: Associate editor Margaret Grainger |
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The later poems of John Clare | ||
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[I pluck summer blossoms]
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I pluck summer blossoms,And think of rich bosoms,
The bosoms I've leaned on; and worshiped and won;
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The wood daffodillies,
Have been found in our rambles when Summer begun.
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Where I plucked thee—the blue bell,'Twas where the night dew fell,
And rested till morn, in the cups of the flowers;
I shook the sweet posies,
Blue bells and sweet roses,
As we sat in a cool shade in summers warm hours.
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Bedlam-cowslips, and cuckoo's,With freck'd-lip, and hook'd nose,
Growing safe 'neath the hazzle, of thicket and woods:
And water-blobs, ladies-smocks,
Blooming, where hay cocks
May be found in the meadows, low places, and floods.
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And cowslips, a fair band,For may-ball, or garland;
That bloom in the meadows, far as seen by the eye;
And pink-ragged-robbin,
Where the fish they are bobbing,
Their heads above water, to catch at the fly.
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Wild-flowers, and wild roses:'Tis love makes the posies,
To paint summer ballads, of meadow, and glen;
Floods can't drown it, nor turn it;
Even flames cannot burn it,
Let it bloom 'till we walk, the green meadows again.
May 1844.
The later poems of John Clare | ||