WE did not wear a leafy crown, And darkly glance to darker glance, Under the green leaf and the brown, Wooing the eyes of maids of France With very bloomy down: We stain'd not hands with purple blood In golden Arno's pleasant vale, Where the proud Brothers quench'd the stain, And saw two murderers in the flood With faces guilty-pale: Nor on the sunny hills of Spain We used to drink the sun and twine Long amorous tendrils to entrap The careless finger of maid to linger And pluck us from the trembling vine To brim her dimpled lap. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TWO LIVES: CONCLUSION. INDIAN SUMMER by WILLIAM ELLERY LEONARD UNTO US A SON IS GIVEN by ALICE MEYNELL SONNET: 3 by RICHARD BARNFIELD THE FINEST DAY OF ONE'S LIFE by JACQUES BARON AN OXFORD IDYLL by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN A GENUINE DIALOGUE BETWEEN A GENTLEWOMAN AT DERBY AND HER MAID by JOHN BYROM |