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Blackberries

by William Allingham
 
 

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[Stir and change from morn till night]
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[Stir and change from morn till night]

Stir and change from morn till night,
Wealth of culture and delight,
Pictures, music, libraries,
Theatres, the flower of these,

164

Every topic its oration,
Every mood its conversation,
Clever men and lovely women,
Tides of human life to swim in,—
O the marvels of the town!
Can I swim? or shall I drown?
Heavenly bright the water-gleam,
Cold and muddy proves the stream.
Endless talk—but what is it?
Insight, poetry, wisdom, wit?
Or news and gossip, lies and sneers,
Limber tongues and itching ears?
Books,—too many; which impede,
Distract; and where's the time to read?
Music,—in the glare and throng
Its tender dream-world suffers wrong.
Pictures,—thousands! large and small,
Jumbled over miles of wall,
Colour, subject, scale, and focus
Jumping as by hocus-pocus.
Theatres,—ay, more than plenty,
I have been to nearly twenty,
Now, one good well-acted play
Show me, Civis, to repay

165

All this costly crush and bother,
Filth and clatter, smoke and smother.
Rather, friend, O show me where
In blessed silence and pure air,
I may bury fathoms deep
In the fountain of sweet sleep
My wearied senses, wilder'd mind.
No such place in Town I find.