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Writ in a Book of Welsh Verse

This is the house where I was bred:
The wind blows through it without stint,
The wind bitten by the roadside mint;
Here brake I loaf, here climbed to bed.
 
The fuchsia on the window sill;
Even the candlesticks a-row,
Wrought by grave men so long ago—
I loved them once, I love them still.
 
Southward and westward a great sky!—
The throb of sea within mine ear—
Then something different, more near,
As though a wistful foot went by.
 
Ghost of a ghost down all the years!—
In low-roofed room, at turn of stair,
At table-setting, and at prayer,
Old wars, old hungers, and old tears!
Other works by Lizette Woodworth Reese...



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