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Norman Rowland Gale (Норман Гейл) The Tutor's Lament I refuse to find attractions In the ancient Roman native; I am sick to death of fractions, And of verbs that take the dative: It is mine to be recorder Of a boy's congested brain, Sir, With the pitch in perfect order And the weather like champagne, Sir! I--the sport of conjugations-- I am cooped up as a lodger Where I serve out mental rations To a proudly backward dodger. While the two of us are dreaming Of the canvas and the creases, Close we sit together, scheming How to pull an ode to pieces. Even now in London's gabble Memory's magic tricks the senses! Plain I hear the streamlet babble, Smell the tar on country fences: Down the road Miss Grey from Marlett Skirts the fox-frequented thicket, In her belt a rose of scarlet, In her eyes the love of cricket. There's my mother with her ponies Underneath Sir Toby's beeches, Pulling up to share with cronies News of grapes and plums and peaches: Many a gaffer stops to fumble At his forelock as she passes, While the children cease to tumble Frocks and blouses in the grasses. Though my body stays with duty Here to work a sum or rider, Mother's magnet and her beauty Draw my soul to sit beside her! Ah, what luck if I were able There to play once more in flannels, Free from all this littered table, Virgil's farmyard, Ovid's annals! There's a loop of leather handle Peeping underneath the sofa! Is tuition worth the candle When the conscience turns a loafer? 'Tis the rich and backward Boarder Proves indeed the Tutor's bane, Sir, When the turf's in ripping order And the weather like champagne, Sir! Norman Rowland Gale's other poems: Распечатать (Print) Количество обращений к стихотворению: 1220 |
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