THE EARTHLY PARADISE. BY WILLIAM MORRIS. VOLUME VIII. FEBRUARY: BELLEROPHON IN LYCIA. THE HILL OF VENUS. EPILOGUE. L’ENVOI.
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February |
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The rain-washed fields from hedge to hedge are bare; |
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Beneath the leafless elms some hind’s abode |
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Looks small and void, and no smoke meets the air |
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From its poor hearth: one lonely rook doth dare |
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The gale, and beats above the unseen corn, |
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Then turns, and whirling down the wind is borne. |
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Shall it not hap that on some dawn of May |
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Thou shalt awake, and, thinking of days dead, |
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See nothing clear but this same dreary day, |
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Of all the days that have passed o’er thine head? |
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Shalt thou not wonder, looking from thy bed, |
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Through green leaves on the windless east a-fire, |
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That this day too thine heart doth still desire? |
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Shalt thou not wonder that it liveth yet, |
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The useless hope, the useless craving pain, |
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That made thy face, that lonely noontide, wet |
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With more than beating of the chilly rain? |
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Shalt thou not hope for joy new-born again, |
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Since no grief ever born can ever die |
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Through changeless change of seasons passing by? |
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Drives on the wind, and gives the clouds no rest, |
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And ruffles up the water thin that lies |
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Over the surface of the thawing ice; |
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Sunrise and sunset with no glorious show |
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Are seen, as late they were across the snow; |
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The wet-lipped west wind chilleth to the bone |
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More than the light and flickering east hath done. |
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Full soberly the earth’s fresh hope begins, |
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Nor stays to think of what each new day wins: |
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10 |
And still it seems to bid us turn away |
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From this chill thaw to dream of blossomed May: |
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E’en as some hapless lover’s dull shame sinks |
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Away sometimes in day-dreams, and he thinks |
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No more of yesterday’s disgrace and foil, |
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No more he thinks of all the sickening toil |
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Of piling straw on straw to reach the sky; |
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But rather now a pitying face draws nigh, |
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Mid tears and prayers for pardon; and a tale |
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To make love tenderer now is all the bale |
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Love brought him erst. But on this chill dank tide |
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Still are the old men by the fireside, |
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And all things cheerful round the day just done |
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Shut out the memory of the cloud-drowned sun, |
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And dripping bough and blotched and snow-soaked earth; |
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And little as the tide seemed made for mirth, |
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Scarcely they lacked it less than months agone, |
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When on their wrinkles bright the great sun shone; |
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Rather, perchance, less pensive now they were, |
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And meeter for that cause old tales to hear |
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Of stirring deeds long dead. So, as it fell, |
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Preluding nought, an elder ‘gan to tell |
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The story promised in mid-winter days |
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Of all that latter end of bliss and praise |
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That erst befell Bellerophon the bright, |
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Ere all except his name sank into night. |
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