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The Double

Topics: classic

I curtseyed to the dovecote.         I curtseyed to the well.      I twirled me round and round about,         The morning sweets to smell.      When out I came from spinning so,         Lo, betwixt green and blue      Was the ghost of me - a Fairy Child -         A-dancing - dancing, too.      Nought was of her wearing         That is the earth's array.      Her thistledown feet beat airy fleet         Yet set no blade astray.      The gossamer shining dews of June         Showed grey against the green;      Yet never so much as a bird-claw print         Of footfall to be seen.      Fading in the mounting sun         That image soon did pine.      Fainter than moonlight thinned the locks         That shone as clear as mine.      Vanished! Vanished! O, sad it is         To spin and spin - in vain;      And never to see the ghost of me         A-dancing there again.

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"I curtseyed to the dovecote...."

Walter De La Mare's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "The Double"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"Have you been catching of fish, Tom Noddy?        ..."

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