FLEET wheels had whirled for us, deep hedgerows threading, Till where, down labyrinthine lanes enfolden, The grey, green-mantled church stood, half withholden From passing eyes by elms full-fledged for shedding Midsummer shade, noon-shrunken, softly spreading O'er swarded path a dappled pavement, golden And beryl-flecked, to a door, whose dusk-arch olden Let glimpse in hesitant gleams, the sill's gloom dreading. A knot of children, snowy-bibbed, blue-skirted, Hung round the gate, from devious ways diverted; Shawled crone's slow halt and girl's light foot one goal Had found thereby. @3Grand weather for whose wedding?@1 Methought: and straight a daw from ivied steading Swooped startled, as a bell began totoll. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A SHROPSHIRE LAD: 9 by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 61. AL-MO'HYI by EDWIN ARNOLD SONNET TO A FRIEND by BERNARD BARTON VOICE OF THE SEA by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE EPIGRAM ON ELPHINSTONE'S TRANSLATION OF MARTIAL'S EPIGRAMS by ROBERT BURNS |