Often I've heard the Wind sigh By the ivied orchard wall, Over the leaves in the dark night, Breathe a sighing call, And faint away in the silence While I, in my bed, Wondered, 'twixt dreaming and waking, What it said. Nobody knows what the Wind is, Under the height of the sky, Where the hosts of the stars keep far away house And its wave sweeps by -- Just a great wave of the air, Tossing the leaves in its sea, And foaming under the eaves of the roof\ That covers me. And so we live under deep water, All of us, beasts and men, And our bodies are buried down under the sand, When we go again; And leave, like the fishes, our shells, And float on the Wind and away, To where, o'er the marvellous tides of the air, Burns day.
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Confirmed with Peacock Pie. A Book of Rhymes by Walter de la Mare, London: Constable & Co. Ltd., [1920], page 156.
Authorship:
- by Walter De la Mare (1873 - 1956), "Nobody knows", appears in Peacock Pie: A Book of Rhymes, in 7. Earth and Air, no. 3, first published 1913 [author's text checked 1 time against a primary source]
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This text was added to the website: 2014-06-12
Line count: 24
Word count: 143