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The
Last Robin
Lyrics and Sonnets
by
Ethelwyn Wetherald
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THE
BLIND MAN.
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THE blind man at his window bars
Stands in the morning
dewy dim;
The pearly-mantled dawn, the stars
That wait for it, are
naught to him.
And
naught to his unseeing eyes |
5 |
The brownness of a sunny plain,
Where worn and drowsy August lies,
And wakens but to sleep
again.
And
naught to him a greening slope,
That yearns up to the
height above, |
10 |
And
naught the leaves of May that ope
As softly as the eyes
of love.
And
naught to him the branching aisles,
Athrong with woodland
worshippers,
And naught the fields where summer smiles |
15 |
Among her sunburned laborers. [Page 145]
The
way trailing streamlet goes,
The barefoot grasses
on its brim,
The dew a flower cup o’erflows
With silent joy, are
hid from him. |
20 |
To him no breath of nature calls;
Upon his desk his work
is laid;
He looks up at the dingy walls,
And listens to the voice
of Trade. [Page 146]
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