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Town And Country

By Rupert Brooke

Topics: classic

Here, where love's stuff is body, arm and side     Are stabbing-sweet 'gainst chair and lamp and wall.     In every touch more intimate meanings hide;     And flaming brains are the white heart of all.     Here, million pulses to one centre beat:     Closed in by men's vast friendliness, alone,     Two can be drunk with solitude, and meet     On the sheer point where sense with knowing's one.     Here the green-purple clanging royal night,     And the straight lines and silent walls of town,     And roar, and glare, and dust, and myriad white     Undying passers, pinnacle and crown     Intensest heavens between close-lying faces     By the lamp's airless fierce ecstatic fire;     And we've found love in little hidden places,     Under great shades, between the mist and mire.     Stay! though the woods are quiet, and you've heard     Night creep along the hedges. Never go     Where tangled foliage shrouds the crying bird,     And the remote winds sigh, and waters flow!     Lest, as our words fall dumb on windless noons,     Or hearts grow hushed and solitary, beneath     Unheeding stars and unfamiliar moons,     Or boughs bend over, close and quiet as death,     Unconscious and unpassionate and still,     Cloud-like we lean and stare as bright leaves stare,     And gradually along the stranger hill     Our unwalled loves thin out on vacuous air,     And suddenly there's no meaning in our kiss,     And your lit upward face grows, where we lie,     Lonelier and dreadfuller than sunlight is,     And dumb and mad and eyeless like the sky.

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"Here, where love's stuff is body, arm and side..."

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Author:Rupert Brooke

"Here, where love's stuff is body, arm and side..." by Rupert Brooke

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Rupert Brooke

About Rupert Brooke

Rupert Brooke (1887–1915) was an English war poet whose sonnets—including "The Soldier" ("If I should die, think only this of me")—idealized the sacrifice of war. He died of sepsis en route to Gallipoli and became a symbol of the lost generation of WWI.

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