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The Peasant's Return

By William Barnes

Topics: classic

And passing here through evening dew, He hastened happy to her door, But found the old folk only two With no more footsteps on the floor To walk again below the skies Where beaten paths do fall and rise. For she wer gone from earthly eyes To be a-kept in darksome sleep Until the good again do rise A joy to souls they left to weep. The rose were dust that bound her brow; The moth did eat her Sunday cape; Her frock were out of fashion now; Her shoes were dried up out of shape.

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Author:William Barnes

"And passing here through evening dew,..." by William Barnes

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

William Barnes

About William Barnes

William Barnes (1801–1886) was an English poet who wrote in Dorset dialect. His nature poems and pastoral verses celebrate rural English life with linguistic precision and deep feeling.

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