Sonnet Xxxvi. The Gipsy Girl. Poem by Henry Alford

Sonnet Xxxvi. The Gipsy Girl.



Passing I saw her as she stood beside
A lonely stream between two barren wolds;
Her loose vest hung in rudely--gathered folds
On her swart bosom, which in maiden pride
Pillowed a string of pearls; among her hair
Twined the light bluebell and the stonecrop gay;
And not far thence the small encampment lay,
Curling its wreathèd smoke into the air.
She seemed a child of some sun--favoured clime;
So still, so habited to warmth and rest;
And in my wayward musings on past time,
When my thought fills with treasured memories,
That image nearest borders on the blest
Creations of pure art that never dies.

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