Ah little mill, you're rumbling still,
Ah sunset flecked with gold!
Ah deepening tinge, ah purple fringe
Of lilac as of old!
Ah hawthorn hedge, ah light-won pledge
Of kisses warm and plenty,
When she was true, and twenty-two,
And I was two-and-twenty.
I don't know how she broke her vow,
She said that I was "horty"
And there's the mill a goin' still,
And I am five-and-forty.
And sooth to tell, 'twas just as well,
Her aitches were uncertain;
Her ways though nice, not point-device;
Her father liked his" Burton."
But there's a place you cannot trace,
So spare the fond endeavour,
A cloudless sky, where Kate and I
Are twenty-two for ever.
An Oxford Idyll
Thomas Edward Brown
(1)
Poem topics: father, light, purple, sky, sunset, place, hedge, true, gold, warm, point, I love you, I miss you, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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An Oxford Idyll is a poem by Thomas Edward Brown. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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