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The Summer House.

Topics: classic

Midway upon the lawn it stands,         So picturesque and pretty;     Upreared by patient artist hands,         Admired of all the city;     The very arbor of my dream,         A covert cool and airy,     So leaf-embowered as to seem         The dwelling of a fairy.     It is the place to lie supine         Within a hammock swinging,     To watch the sunset, red as wine,         To hear the crickets singing;     And while the insect world around         Is buzzing - by the million -     No wingd thing above the ground         Intrudes in this pavilion.     It is the place, at day's decline,         To tell the old, old story     Behind the dark Madeira vine,         Behind the morning glory;     To confiscate the rustic seat         And barter stolen kisses,     For honey must be twice as sweet         In such a spot as this is.     It is the haunt where one may get         Relief from petty trouble,     May read the latest day's gazette         About the "Klondike" bubble:     How shanties rise like golden courts.         Where sheep wear glittering fleeces,     How gold is picked up - by the quartz -         And all get rich as Croesus.     Here hid away from dust and heat,         Secure from rude intrusion,     While willing lips the thought repeat,         So grows the fond illusion:     That happiness the product is         Of lazy, languid dozing,     Of soft midsummer reveries,         Half-waking, half-reposing.     And here in restful interlude,         Life's fallacies forgetting,     Its frailties - such a multitude -         The fuming and the fretting,     Amid the fragrance, dusk, and dew,         The happy soul at even     May walk abroad, and interview         Bright messengers from Heaven.

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"Midway upon the lawn it stands,..."

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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"

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"Oh, sing me a merry song!         My heart is sad ..."

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