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Lambourn Town

Topics: classic

The rain beat on me as I walked,     In the roadside it ran and muttered.     It seemed the rain to the wind talked     Of storm: in the wind the wild cloud fluttered.     Across the down, now bleak and loud,     I went and the rain ran with me.     How swift the rain, how low the cloud!     No heavenly comfort could I see,     Nor comfort of low beaming light     From any casement creeping out.     The swift rain on the patient night     Swept, and anon would great winds shout.     Rain, rain, nought else, until I turned     The thrusting shoulder of the down,     And through the mist of rain there burned     The few green lanterns of the town.     And in the rain the night was lit     With my love's eyes burning for me;     Her white face in the dark was sweet,     Her hands like moonflowers quiveringly     Fell upon mine, and each was dashed     With rain blown in from streaming eaves,     While overhead the broad flood plashed     Noisily on the broad plane leaves.     Within we heard the gurgle-glock     In the pipe, the tip-tap on the sill     Like the same ticking of the clock;     We heard the water-butt o'erspill,     The wind come blustering at the door,     The whipped white lilac thrash the wall;     The candle flame upon the floor     Crept between shadows magical....     In the black east a pallid ray     Rose high; and sweeping o'er the down     The slow increase of stormless day     Lit the wet roofs of Lambourn town.

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"The rain beat on me as I walked,..."

"Lambourn Town" 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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