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From Piccadilly In August

Topics: classic

Now the trees rest: the moon has taught them sleep,     Like drowsy wings of bats are all their leaves,     Clinging together. Girls at ease who fold     Fair hands upon white necks and through dusk fields     Walk all content,--of them the trees have taken     Their way of evening rest; the yellow moon     With her pale gold has lit their dreams that lisp     On the wind's murmuring lips.     And low beyond     Burn those bright lamps beneath the moon more bright,     Lamps that but flash and sparkle and light not     The inward eye and musing thought, nor reach     Where, poplar-like, that tall-built campanile     Lifts to the neighbouring moon her head and feels     The pale gold like an ocean laving her.

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"Now the trees rest: the moon has taught them sleep,..."

"From Piccadilly In August" is a quintessential example of John Frederick Freeman's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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