When Smoke Stood Up From Ludlow
Alfred Edward Housman
When smoke stood up from Ludlow, And mist blew off from Teme, And blithe afield to ploughing Against the morning beam I strode beside my team, The blackbird in the coppice Looked out to see me stride, And hearkened as I whistled The trampling team beside, And fluted and replied: “Lie down, lie down, young yeoman; What use to rise and rise? Rise man a thousand mornings Yet down at last he lies, And then the man is wise.” I heard the tune he sang me, And spied his yellow bill; I picked a stone and aimed it And threw it with a will: Then the bird was still. Then my soul within me Took up the blackbird’s strain, And still beside the horses Along the dewy lane It sang the song again: “Lie down, lie down, young yeoman; The sun moves always west; The road one treads to labour Will lead one home to rest, And that will be the best.”
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- Alfred Edward Housman : When I Watch The Living Meet
- Alfred Edward Housman : When I Was One-and-twenty
- Alfred Edward Housman : When I Came Last To Ludlow
- Alfred Edward Housman : Westward On The High-hilled Plains
- Alfred Edward Housman : Wake Not For The World-heard Thunder
- Alfred Edward Housman : Twice A Week The Winter Thorough
- Alfred Edward Housman : To An Athlete Dying Young
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- Alfred Edward Housman : This Time Of Year A Twelvemonth Past
- Alfred Edward Housman : Think No More, Lad; Laugh, Be Jolly