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Home  »  The Complete Poetical Works by William Wordsworth  »  VIII. NEAR ROME, IN SIGHT OF ST. PETER’S

MEMORIALS OF A TOUR IN ITALY, 1837

VIII. NEAR ROME, IN SIGHT OF ST. PETER’S

MEMORIALS OF A TOUR IN ITALY, 1837


LONG has the dew been dried on tree and lawn: O’er man and beast a not unwelcome boon Is shed, the languor of approaching noon; To shady rest withdrawing or withdrawn Mute are all creatures, as this couchant fawn, Save insect-swarms that hum in air afloat, Save that the Cock is crowing, a shrill note, Startling and shrill as that which roused the dawn. –Heard in that hour, or when, as now, the nerve Shrinks from the note as from a mistimed thing, 10 Oft for a holy warning may it serve, Charged with remembrance of ‘his’ sudden sting, His bitter tears, whose name the Papal Chair And yon resplendent Church are proud to bear.