HE comes on chosen evenings, My blackbird bountiful, and sings Over the gardens of the town Just at the hour the sun goes down. His flight across the chimneys thick, By some divine arithmetic, Comes to his customary stack, And couches there his plumage black, And there he lifts his yellow bill, Kindled against the sunset, till These suburbs are like Dymock woods Where music has her solitudes, And while he mocks the winter's wrong Rapt on his pinnacle of song, Figured above our garden plots Those are celestial chimney-pots. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...KEENAN'S CHARGE by GEORGE PARSONS LATHROP RAILROAD RHYME by JOHN GODFREY SAXE THE KITTEN AND THE FALLING LEAVES by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH THE SCOTTISH CHRISTMAS by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN THE PIONEER'S FIELD by RICHARD BECK |