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I walked in a half-mown flowering meadow by the sea's- Edge of the grass, where yesterday the mower went. Bloomy and purple as clover were the fog-grass and bent; The field so wide, it broke on misty boundaries.
The stubble and mown hay were fresh like tidal sand When at low tide I walked by that standing lake-waved sea; The surface of the grass wore such fluidity, Melting of plane in plane, as seemed unknown on land.
Our eyes rest on the sea like gulls and find a home In that infinity. My eyes would not be called By the small flags of ash-trees in the hedge, or belled Flocking of children, from the sea where they had come,
Whose sky-reflecting waves, mantled with darkness under, In waves' compulsive ways bred form on form of light; Whose currents far from land carried fordone my sight; All colour at the full as in a time of thunder.
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