Lyrics Over Sir John's Hill - Dylan Thomas
Over
Sir
John′s
hill,
The
hawk
on
fire
hangs
still;
In
a
hoisted
cloud,
at
drop
of
dusk,
he
pulls
to
his
Claws
And
gallows,
up
the
rays
of
his
eyes
the
small
birds
of
The
bay
And
the
shrill
child's
play
Wars
Of
the
sparrows
and
such
who
swansing,
dusk,
in
Wrangling
hedges.
And
blithely
they
squawk
To
fiery
tyburn
over
the
wrestle
of
elms
until
The
flash
the
noosed
hawk
Crashes,
and
slowly
the
fishing
holy
stalking
heron
In
the
river
Towy
below
bows
his
tilted
headstone.
Flash,
and
the
plumes
crack,
And
a
black
cap
of
jack-
Daws
Sir
John′s
just
hill
dons,
and
again
the
gulled
Birds
hare
To
the
hawk
on
fire,
the
halter
height,
over
Towy's
Fins,
In
a
whack
of
wind.
There
Where
the
elegiac
fisherbird
stabs
and
paddles
In
the
pebbly
dab-filled
Shallow
and
sedge,
and
'dilly
dilly,
′ calls
the
loft
Hawk,
′Come
and
be
killed,
'
I
open
the
leaves
of
the
water
at
a
passage
Of
psalms
and
shadows
among
the
pincered
sandcrabs
Prancing
And
read,
in
a
shell
Death
clear
as
a
bouy′s
bell:
All
praise
of
the
hawk
on
fire
in
hawk-eyed
dusk
be
Sung,
When
his
viperish
fuse
hangs
looped
with
flames
under
The
brand
Wing,
and
blest
shall
Young
Green
chickens
of
the
bay
and
bushes
cluck,
'dilly
Dilly,
Come
let
us
die.′
We
grieve
as
the
blithe
birds,
never
again,
leave
Shingle
and
elm,
The
heron
and
I,
I
young
Aesop
fabling
to
the
near
night
by
the
dingle
Of
eels,
saint
heron
hymning
in
the
shell-hung
distant
Crystal
harbour
vale
Where
the
sea
cobbles
sail,
And
wharves
of
water
where
the
walls
dance
and
the
White
cranes
stilt.
It
is
the
heron
and
I,
under
judging
Sir
John's
elmed
Hill,
tell-tale
the
knelled
Guilt
Of
the
led-astray
birds
whom
God,
for
their
breast
of
Whistles,
Have
Mercy
on,
God
in
his
whirlwind
silence
save,
who
marks
the
Sparrows
hail,
For
their
souls′
song.
Now
the
heron
grieves
in
the
weeded
verge.
Through
Windows
Of
dusk
and
water
I
see
the
tilting
whispering
Heron,
mirrored,
go,
As
the
snapt
feathers
snow,
Fishing
in
the
tear
of
the
Towy.
Only
a
hoot
owl
Hollows,
a
grassblade
blown
in
cupped
hands,
in
the
Looted
elms
And
no
green
cocks
or
hens
Shout
Now
on
Sir
John's
hill.
The
heron,
ankling
the
scaly
Lowlands
of
the
waves,
Makes
all
the
music;
and
I
who
hear
the
tune
of
the
Slow,
Wear-willow
river,
grave,
Before
the
lunge
of
the
night,
the
notes
on
this
time-
Shaken
Stone
for
the
sake
of
the
souls
of
the
slain
birds
Sailing.
1 On Reading One's Own Poems
2 The Hand That Signed the Paper
3 Poem In October
4 Visit to America, Pt. 1
5 Visit to America, Pt. 2
6 Visit to America, Pt. 3
7 Return Journey to Swansea, Pt. 1
8 Return Journey to Swansea, Pt. 2
9 Return Journey to Swansea, Pt. 3
10 Return Journey to Swansea, Pt. 4
11 Return Journey to Swansea, Pt. 5
12 Return Journey to Swansea, Pt. 6
13 A Visit to Grandpa's, Pt. 1
14 A Visit to Grandpa's, Pt. 2
15 A Visit to Grandpa's, Pt. 3
16 In My Craft
17 After the Funeral (Introduction)
18 After the Funeral
19 Quite Early One Morning, Pt. 1
20 Quite Early One Morning, Pt. 2
21 Quite Early One Morning, Pt. 3
22 Quite Early One Morning, Pt. 4
23 Over Sir John's Hill
24 A Refusal To Mourn The Death, By Fire, Of A Child In London
25 The Outing, Pt. 1
26 The Outing, Pt. 2
27 The Outing, Pt. 3
28 The Outing, Pt. 4
29 The Outing, Pt. 5
30 Laugharne
31 Under Milkwood (Extract)
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