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1849–1903

XII — ETCHING

William Ernest Henley

Two and thirty is the ploughman. He's a man of gallant inches, And his hair is close and curly, And his beard;

But his face is wan and sunken, And his eyes are large and brilliant, And his shoulder-blades are sharp, And his knees.

He is weak of wits, religious, Full of sentiment and yearning, Gentle, faded — with a cough And a snore.

When his wife ( who was a widow, And is many years his elder ) Fails to write, and that is always, He desponds.

Let his melancholy wander, And he'll tell you pretty stories Of the women that have wooed him Long ago;

Or he'll sing of bonnie lasses Keeping sheep among the heather, With a crackling, hackling click In his voice.

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XII — ETCHING · William Ernest Henley · Poetry Cove