Poetry Explorer


Classic and Contemporary Poetry


THE LARK'S NEST by CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER

First Line: I NEVER HEAR A LARK ITS MATINS SING
Last Line: BENEATH A MORNING SKY THEY COULD NOT SEE.
Subject(s): BIRDS; LARKS; SKYLARKS;

I never hear a lark its matins sing,
But I bethink me of that orphan nest,
Where once I saw a little callow thing,
Erect, with death-cold wings, above the rest,
As tho' he lived and pleaded. Light and shade
Swept in and out of his poor open maw,
While underneath his silent feet I saw
A short-breathed group of helpless orphans laid.
The life was ebbing from each infant throat,
Too young as yet for music's earliest note;
High up a living lark sang loud and free -
Keen was the contrast - it was sad to mark
Those eyes, heaven-charter'd, now earth-bound and dark:
Beneath a morning sky they could not see.



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