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Seventeen

Topics: classic

For Anne.     All the loud winds were in the garden wood,     All shadows joyfuller than lissom hounds     Doubled in chasing, all exultant clouds     That ever flung fierce mist and eddying fire     Across heavens deeper than blue polar seas     Fled over the sceptre-spikes of the chestnuts,     Over the speckle of the wych-elms' green.     She shouted; then stood still, hushed and abashed     To hear her voice so shrill in that gay roar,     And suddenly her eyelashes were dimmed,     Caught in tense tears of spiritual joy;     For there were daffodils which sprightly shook     Ten thousand ruffling heads throughout the wood,     And every flower of those delighting flowers     Laughed, nodding to her, till she clapped her hands     Crying 'O daffies, could you only speak!'     But there was more. A jay with skyblue shaft     Set in blunt wing, skimmed screaming on ahead.     She followed him. A murrey squirrel eyed     Her warily, cocked upon tail-plumed haunch,     Then, skipping the whirligig of last-year leaves,     Whisked himself out of sight and reappeared     Leering about the hole of a young beech;     And every time she thought to corner him     He scrambled round on little scratchy hands     To peek at her about the other side.     She lost him, bolting branch to branch, at last -     The impudent brat! But still high overhead     Flight on exuberant flight of opal scud,     Or of dissolving mist, florid as flame.     Scattered in ecstasy over the blue. And she     Followed, first walking, giving her bright locks     To the cold fervour of the springtime gale,     Whose rush bore the cloud shadow past the cloud     Over the irised wastes of emerald turf.     And still the huge wind volleyed. Save the gulls,     Goldenly in the sunny blast careering     Or on blue-shadowed underwing at plunge,     None shared with her who now could not but run     The splendour and tumult of th' onrushing spring.     And now she ran no more: the gale gave plumes.     One with the shadows whirled along the grass,     One with the onward smother of veering gulls,     One with the pursuit of cloud after cloud,     Swept she. Pure speed coursed in immortal limbs;     Nostrils drank as from wells of unknown air;     Ears received the smooth silence of racing floods;     Light as of glassy suns froze in her eyes;     Space was given her and she ruled all space.     Spring, author of twifold loveliness,     Who flittest in the mirth of the wild folk,     Profferest greeting in the faces of flowers,     Blowest in the firmamental glory,     Renewest in the heart of the sad human     All faiths, guard thou the innocent spirit     Into whose unknowing hands this noontide     Thou pourest treasure, yet scarce recognised,     That unashamed before man's glib wisdom,     Unabashed beneath the wrath of chance,     She accept in simplicity of homage     The hidden holiness, the created emblem     To be in her, until death shall take her,     The source and secret of eternal spring.

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"For Anne...."

Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Seventeen"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"Put by the sun my joyful soul,     We are for dark..."

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