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The Wild Common

Topics: classic

THE quick sparks on the gorse bushes are leaping,     Little jets of sunlight-texture imitating flame;     Above them, exultant, the pee-wits are sweeping:     They are lords of the desolate wastes of sadness their screamings proclaim.     Rabbits, handfuls of brown earth, lie     Low-rounded on the mournful grass they have bitten down to the quick.     Are they asleep? - Are they alive? - Now see, when I     Move my arms the hill bursts and heaves under their spurting kick.     The common flaunts bravely; but below, from the rushes     Crowds of glittering king-cups surge to challenge the blossoming bushes;     There the lazy streamlet pushes     Its curious course mildly; here it wakes again, leaps, laughs, and gushes.     Into a deep pond, an old sheep-dip,     Dark, overgrown with willows, cool, with the brook ebbing through so slow,     Naked on the steep, soft lip     Of the bank I stand watching my own white shadow quivering to and fro.     What if the gorse flowers shrivelled and kissing were lost?     Without the pulsing waters, where were the marigolds and the songs of the brook?     If my veins and my breasts with love embossed     Withered, my insolent soul would be gone like flowers that the hot wind took.     So my soul like a passionate woman turns,     Filled with remorseful terror to the man she scorned, and her love     For myself in my own eyes' laughter burns,     Runs ecstatic over the pliant folds rippling down to my belly from the breast-lights above.     Over my sunlit skin the warm, clinging air,     Rich with the songs of seven larks singing at once, goes kissing me glad.     And the soul of the wind and my blood compare     Their wandering happiness, and the wind, wasted in liberty, drifts on and is sad.     Oh but the water loves me and folds me,     Plays with me, sways me, lifts me and sinks me as though it were living blood,     Blood of a heaving woman who holds me,     Owning my supple body a rare glad thing, supremely good.

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"THE quick sparks on the gorse bushes are leaping,..."

This evocative piece by D. H. Lawrence (David Herbert Richards), titled "The Wild Common", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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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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"The chime of the bells, and the church clock strik..."

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