William Watson (Уильям Уотсон)
The Empty Nest
I saunter all about the pleasant place You made thrice pleasant, O my friends, to me; But you are gone where laughs in radiant grace That thousand-memoried unimpulsive sea. To storied precincts of the southern foam, Dear birds of passage, ye have taken wing, And ah! for me, when April wafts you home, The spring will more than ever be the spring Still lovely, as of old, this haunted ground; Tenderly, still, the autumn sunshine falls; And gorgeously the woodlands tower around, Freak'd with wild light at golden intervals: Yet, for the ache your absence leaves, O friends, Earth's lifeless pageantries are poor amends.
William Watson’s other poems:
- The Blind Summit
- England and Her Colonies
- On Exaggerated Deference to Foreign Literary Opinion
- Mensis Lacrimarum
- Scentless Flow’rs I Bring Thee
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