Wilfrid Scawen Blunt. b. 1840
823. The Two Highwaymen
1 min to read
125 words

I LONG have had a quarrel set with Time Because he robb'd me. Every day of life Was wrested from me after bitter strife: I never yet could see the sun go down But I was angry in my heart, nor hear The leaves fall in the wind without a tear Over the dying summer. I have known No truce with Time nor Time's accomplice, Death.   The fair world is the witness of a crime Repeated every hour. For life and breath Are sweet to all who live; and bitterly The voices of these robbers of the heath Sound in each ear and chill the passer-by. —What have we done to thee, thou monstrous Time? What have we done to Death that we must die?

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Henry Austin Dobson. b. 1840
824. A Garden Song
1 min to read
124 words
Return to Hemingway's List for a Young Writer (1934)






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