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The Wren

Topics: classic

Within the greenhouse dim and damp     The heat floats like a cloud.     Pale rose-leaves droop from the rust roof     With rust-edged roses bowed.     As I go in     Out flies the startled wren.     By the tall dark fir tree he sings     Morn after morn still,     Shy and bold he flits and sings     Tinily sweet and shrill.     As I go out     His song follows me about ...     About the orchard under trees     Beaded with cherries bright,     Past the rat-haunted Honeybourne     And up those hills of light:     As up I go     His notes more sweetly flow.     Or down those dark hills when night's there     Full of dark thoughts and deep,     A thin clear soundless music comes     Like stars in broken sleep.     When I come down     All those dark thoughts are flown.     And now that sweetness is more sweet,     Here where the aeroplanes     Labouring and groaning in the height     Lift their lifeless vans:--     Sweet, sweet to hear     The far off wren singing clear.

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"Within the greenhouse dim and damp..."

John Frederick Freeman's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "The Wren"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"Away, away--     Through that strange void and vas..."

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