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Reading A Letter - By D H Lawrence
SHE sits on the recreation ground
Under an oak whose yellow buds dot the pale
blue sky.
The young grass twinkles in the wind, and the sound
Of the wind in the knotted buds in a canopy.
So sitting under the knotted canopy
Of the wind, she is lifted and carried away as in
a balloon
Across the insensible void, till she stoops to see
The sandy desert beneath her, the dreary platoon.
She knows the waste all dry beneath her, in one
place
Stirring with earth-coloured life, ever turning and
stirring.
But never the motion has a human face
Nor sound, save intermittent machinery whirring.
And so again, on the recreation ground
She alights a stranger, wondering, unused to the
scene;
Suffering at sight of the children playing around,
Hurt at the chalk-coloured tulips, and the even-
ing-green.
Labels
Alfred Tennyson
Charlotte Bronte
D H Lawrence
Edgar Allan Poe
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Emily Dickinson
Jane Austen
John Donne
John Keats
Louisa May Alcott
Mark Twain
Matthew Arnold
Oscar Wilde
Raj Sharma
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Robert Frost
Robert Louis Stevenson
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Sara Teasdale
Sir Philip Sidney
Sylvia Plath
William Blake
William Butler Yeats
William Shakespeare
William Wordsworth