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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


FULVIA, OR SUPPOSED THOUGHTS OF A HOOTED CANDIDATE (1) by CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER

First Line: WELCOME, YE SHADES OF SUMMER EVE, THAT CLOSE
Last Line: SHOULD EITHER TAX OUR NEEDLES FOR REPLY?
Subject(s): ANTONY, MARC (83-30 B.C.); FULVIA (40 B.C.); MARCUS ANTONIUS; ANTHONY, MARK;

Welcome, ye shades of summer eve, that close
My day among the tongues of yonder town!
I would not pluck them out nor pin them down,
As vengeful Fulvia did with Cicero's -
Nor to mere petulance of speech assign
The cruel meed of his rare excellence -
Enough for me this stillness, and the sense
That they no longer vex these ears of mine;
I will not vent my rage on foolish lungs,
Nor, even in fancy, re-enact the deed
Wreak'd on the Roman, in the stress and need
Of a great anger; why should ribald songs
Scourge like impeaching eloquence? or why
Should either tax our needles for reply?



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