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 POPPIES ON LUDLOW CASTLE by Willa Cather 
						THROUGH halls of vanished pleasure, And hold of vanished power,
 And crypt of faith forgotten,
 A came to Ludlow tower.
 
 A-top of arch and stairway,
 Of crypt and donjan cell,
 Of council hall, and chamber,
 Of wall, and ditch, and well,
 
 High over grated turrets
 Where clinging ivies run,
 A thousand scarlet poppies
 Enticed the rising sun,
 
 Upon the topmost turret,
 With death and damp below,--
 Three hundred years of spoilage,--
 The crimson poppies grow.
 
 This hall it was that bred him,
 These hills that knew him brave,
 The gentlest English singer
 That fills an English grave.
 
 How have they heart to blossom
 So cruel and gay and red,
 When beauty so hath perished
 And valour so hath sped?
 
 When knights so fair are rotten,
 And captains true asleep,
 And singing lips are dust-stopped
 Six English earth-feet deep?
 
 When ages old remind me
 How much hath gone for naught,
 What wretched ghost remaineth
 Of all that flesh hath wrought;
 
 Of love and song and warring,
 Of adventure and play,
 Of art and comely building,
 Of faith and form and fray--
 
 I'll mind the flowers of pleasure,
 Of short-lived youth and sleep,
 That drunk the sunny weather
 A-top of Ludlow keep.
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