Public Domain Poetry And Stories - On The Sight Of Spring. by John Clare
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On The Sight Of Spring.

    By John Clare



    How sweet it us'd to be, when April first
    Unclos'd the arum-leaves, and into view
    Its ear-like spindling flowers their cases burst,
    Beting'd with yellowish white or lushy hue:
    Though manhood now with such has small to do,
    Yet I remember what delight was mine
    When on my Sunday walks I us'd to go,
    Flower-gathering tribes in childish bliss to join;
    Peeping and searching hedge-row side or woods,
    When thorns stain green with slow unclosing buds.
    Ah, how delighted, humming on the time
    Some nameless song or tale, I sought the flowers;
    Some rushy dyke to jump, or brink to climb,
    Ere I obtain'd them; while from hasty showers
    Oft under trees we nestled in a ring,
    Culling our "lords and ladies."--O ye hours!
    I never see the broad-leav'd arum spring
    Stained with spots of jet; I never see
    Those dear delights which April still does bring,
    But memory's tongue repeats it all to me.
    I view her pictures with an anxious eye,
    I hear her stories with a pleasing pain:
    Youth's wither'd flowers, alas! ye make me sigh,
    To think in me ye'll never bloom again.



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