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Classic poem

Summer Winds

by John Clare

The wind waves oer the meadows green

And shakes my own wild flowers

And shifts about the moving scene

Like the life of summer hours;

The little bents with reedy head,

The scarce seen shapes of flowers,

All kink about like skeins of thread

In these wind-shaken hours.

All stir and strife and life and bustle

In everything around one sees;

The rushes whistle, sedges rustle,

The grass is buzzing round like bees;

The butterflies are tossed about

Like skiffs upon a stormy sea;

The bees are lost amid the rout

And drop in [their] perplexity.

Wilt thou be mine, thou bonny lass?

Thy drapery floats so gracefully;

We'll walk along the meadow grass,

We'll stand beneath the willow tree.

We'll mark the little reeling bee

Along the grassy ocean rove,

Tossed like a little boat at sea,

And interchange our vows of love.

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Public domain/Source

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