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 An English Wood by Robert Graves 
						This valley wood is pledgedTo the set shape of things,
 And reasonably hedged:
 Here are no harpies fledged,
 No rocs may clap their wings,
 Nor gryphons wave their stings.
 Here, poised in quietude,
 Calm elementals brood
 On the set shape of things:
 They fend away alarms
 From this green wood.
 Here nothing is that harms -
 No bulls with lungs of brass,
 No toothed or spiny grass,
 No tree whose clutching arms
 Drink blood when travellers pass,
 No mount of glass;
 No bardic tongues unfold
 Satires or charms.
 Only, the lawns are soft,
 The tree-stems, grave and old;
 Slow branches sway aloft,
 The evening air comes cold,
 The sunset scatters gold.
 Small grasses toss and bend,
 Small pathways idly tend
 Towards no fearful end.
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