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Friday, 28 October 2022

Winter - Seamus O'Sullivan

Why will you plague me with your loveliness? 
     Can you not see 
How vain is every grace and each caress? 
     Prithee let be. 

Your beauty is no less than when we kept 
     The summer that we knew; 
But it is winter, sweet, you should have slept 
     The winter through. 

For what avail your kisses and your sighs, 
The lovely splendour of your tear-bright eyes? 
     Less than a little wine 
Poured out upon the grave 
     Of some old glad and brave 
Dead singer of the vine.

Seamus O'Sullivan (1879 – 1958) Ireland
Source: Verses; sacred and profane, Seamus O'Sullivan, Musnell & Co. Ltd., 1908

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