WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Verses and Sonnets cover

Verses and Sonnets

Chapter 18: AUVERGNAT.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

This collection assembles sonnets, short lyrics, grotesques and epigrams that shift between playful satire and serious meditation. Poems evoke nocturnal reverie, pastoral songs, seasonal sonnets for each month, and compact narrative sketches, while recurring themes include youth and ageing, love and honour, music and faith, mortality and urban poverty. Formal variety—from polished sonnet sequences to biting epigrams—allows intimate love poems to sit beside comic portraits and moral reflections, producing a compact, varied lyrical volume that alternates tenderness, irony, and moral urgency across domestic, religious, and public scenes.

AUVERGNAT.

There was a man was half a clown
(It’s so, my father tells of it),
He saw the church in Clermont Town,
And laughed to hear the bells of it.
He laughed to hear the bells that ring
In Clermont Church and round of it;
He heard the verger’s daughter sing,
And loved her for the sound of it.
The verger’s daughter said him nay
(She had the right of choice in it);
He left the town at break of day
(He hadn’t had a voice in it).
The road went up, the road went down,
And there the matter ended it;
He broke his heart in Clermont Town,
At Pontgibaud they mended it.