| Over Sir John’s hill,
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| The hawk on fire hangs still;
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| In a hoisted cloud, at drop of dusk, he pulls to his
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| Claws
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| And gallows, up the rays of his eyes the small birds of
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| The bay
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| And the shrill child’s play
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| Wars
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| Of the sparrows and such who swansing, dusk, in
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| Wrangling hedges.
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| And blithely they squawk
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| To fiery tyburn over the wrestle of elms until
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| The flash the noosed hawk
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| Crashes, and slowly the fishing holy stalking heron
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| In the river Towy below bows his tilted headstone.
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| Flash, and the plumes crack,
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| And a black cap of jack-
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| Daws Sir John’s just hill dons, and again the gulled
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| Birds hare
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| To the hawk on fire, the halter height, over Towy’s
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| Fins,
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| In a whack of wind.
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| There
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| Where the elegiac fisherbird stabs and paddles
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| In the pebbly dab-filled
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| Shallow and sedge, and 'dilly dilly, ' calls the loft
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| Hawk,
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| 'Come and be killed, '
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| I open the leaves of the water at a passage
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| Of psalms and shadows among the pincered sandcrabs
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| Prancing
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| And read, in a shell
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| Death clear as a bouy’s bell:
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| All praise of the hawk on fire in hawk-eyed dusk be |
| Sung,
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| When his viperish fuse hangs looped with flames under
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| The brand
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| Wing, and blest shall
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| Young
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| Green chickens of the bay and bushes cluck, 'dilly
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| Dilly,
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| Come let us die.'
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| We grieve as the blithe birds, never again, leave
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| Shingle and elm,
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| The heron and I,
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| I young Aesop fabling to the near night by the dingle
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| Of eels, saint heron hymning in the shell-hung distant
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| Crystal harbour vale
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| Where the sea cobbles sail,
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| And wharves of water where the walls dance and the
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| White cranes stilt.
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| It is the heron and I, under judging Sir John’s elmed
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| Hill, tell-tale the knelled
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| Guilt
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| Of the led-astray birds whom God, for their breast of
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| Whistles,
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| Have Mercy on,
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| God in his whirlwind silence save, who marks the
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| Sparrows hail,
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| For their souls' song.
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| Now the heron grieves in the weeded verge. |
| Through
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| Windows
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| Of dusk and water I see the tilting whispering
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| Heron, mirrored, go,
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| As the snapt feathers snow,
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| Fishing in the tear of the Towy. |
| Only a hoot owl
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| Hollows, a grassblade blown in cupped hands, in the
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| Looted elms |
| And no green cocks or hens
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| Shout
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| Now on Sir John’s hill. |
| The heron, ankling the scaly
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| Lowlands of the waves,
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| Makes all the music; |
| and I who hear the tune of the
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| Slow,
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| Wear-willow river, grave,
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| Before the lunge of the night, the notes on this time-
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| Shaken
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| Stone for the sake of the souls of the slain birds
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| Sailing. |