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Poem by Alfred Tennyson Hark! The Dogs Howl! Hark! the dogs howl! the sleetwinds blow, The church-clocks knoll: the hours haste, I leave the dreaming world below. Blown o'er frore heads of hills I go, Long narrowing friths and stripes of snow ÔÇô Time bears my soul into the waste. I seek the voice I loved ÔÇô ah where Is that dear hand that I should press, Those honoured brows that I would kiss? Lo! the broad Heavens cold and bare, The stars that know not my distress. My sighs are wasted in the air, My tears are dropped into the abyss. Now riseth up a little cloud ÔÇô Divideth like a broken wave ÔÇô Shows Death a drooping youth pale-browed And crowned with daisies of the grave. The vapour labours up the sky, Uncertain forms are darkly moved, Larger than human passes by The shadow of the man I loved. I wind my arms for one embrace ÔÇô Can this be he? is that his face? In my strait throat expires the cry. He bends his eyes reproachfully And clasps his hands, as one that prays. Alfred Tennyson Alfred Tennyson's other poems: 1738 Views |
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