Ah! there's a house that I do know Besouth o' yonder trees, Where northern winds can hardly blow But in a softest breeze. An' there woonce sounded zongs an' teäles Vrom vaïce o' maïd or youth, An' sweeter than the nightèngeäle's Above the copses lewth. How swiftly there did run the brooks, How swift wer winds in flight, How swiftly to their roost the rooks Did vlee o'er head at night. Though slow did seem to us the peäce O' comèn days a-head, That now do seem as in a reäce Wi' aïr-birds to ha' vled. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EXPLICATION OF AN IMAGINARY TEXT by JAMES GALVIN THE MEASURE OF THE YEAR by JAMES GALVIN THE FLESH AND THE SPIRIT by ANNE BRADSTREET AT CANDLE-LIGHTIN' TIME by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR SONNET OF HIS LADY IN HEAVEN by JACOPO DA LENTINO |