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Главная • Биографии • Стихи по темам • Случайное стихотворение • Переводчики • Ссылки • Антологии Рейтинг поэтов • Рейтинг стихотворений |
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Edith Louisa Sitwell (Эдит Луиза Ситуэлл) The Girl with the Lint-White Locks THE bright-striped wooden fields are edged With noisy cock’s crow trees, scarce fledged-- The trees that spin like tops, all weathers, Like strange birds ruffling glassy feathers. My hair is white as flocks of geese, And water hisses out of this; And when the late sun burns my cheek Till it is pink as apples sleek, I wander in the fields and know Why kings do squander pennies so-- Lest they at last should weight their eyes! But beggars’ ragged minds, more wise, Know without flesh we cannot see-- And so they hoard stupidity (The dull ancestral memory That is the only property). They laugh to see the spring fields edged With noisy cock’s crow trees scarce fledged, And flowers that grunt to feel their eyes Made clear with sight’s finalities. Edith Louisa Sitwell's other poems: Количество обращений к стихотворению: 1564 |
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Английская поэзия | ||