Public Domain Poetry And Stories - O Muse Divine by John Frederick Freeman
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O Muse Divine

    By John Frederick Freeman



    O thou, my Muse,
    Beside the Kentish River running
    Through water-meads where dews
    Tossed flashing at thy feet
    And tossing flashed again
    When the timid herd
    By thy swift passing stirred
    Up-leapt and ran;

    Thou that didst fleet
    Thy shadow over dark October hills
    By Aston, Weston, Saintbury, Willersey,
    Winchcombe, and all the combes and hills
    Of the green lonely land;

    Thou that in May
    Once when I saw thee sunning
    Thyself so lovely there
    Than the flushed flower more fair
    Fallen from the wild apple spray,
    Didst rise and sprinkling sunlight with thy hand
    Shadow-like disappear in the deep-shadowy hedges
    Between forsaken Buckle Street and the sparse sedges
    Of young twin-breasted Honeybourne; -

    O thou, my Muse,
    Scarce longer seen than the brief hues
    Of winter cloud that flames
    Over the tarnished silver Thames;
    So often nearing,
    As often disappearing,
    With thy body's shadow brushing
    My brain at midnight, lightly touching;
    O yield thee, Muse, to me,
    No more in dream delights and morn forgettings,
    But in a ferny hollow I know well
    And thou know'st well, warm-proof'd 'gainst the wind's frettings.
    ... Bring thou thyself, and there
    In that warm ferny hollow where the sun
    Slants one gold beam and no light else but thine
    And my eyes' happy shine -
    There, O lovely Muse,
    Shall on thy shining body be begot,
    Fruit of delights a many mingling in one,
    Thy child and mine, a lovely shape and thought;
    My child and thine,
    O Muse divine!



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