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Poems at Home and Abroad

By the Revd. H. D. Rawnsley

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Home from Italy
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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102

Home from Italy

There are no snow-white oxen in the dales
To drag with rolling gait the narrow wain;
No cypress plumes the hill, and in the plain
I scent no vines, I hear no nightingales;
But the same rose, whose beauty there prevails,
Shuts her pink petals from the gentle rain;
The same swifts cry above the topmost vane,
And high in air the self-same buzzard sails.
Thro' silent sunburnt flats no Tiber streams,
No Amiata shines divinely blue,
No purple city dreams about its dome;
But Skiddaw lifts his bulk of changeful hue,
Thro' lush green meads the Greta sounds and gleams,
And one fair garden calls the wanderer home.