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FURTHER READING
Poems by John Clare
Farewell
Haymaking
I Am!
Summer Images
The Old Year
Related Poems
I heard a Fly buzz (465)
by Emily Dickinson
The Fly
by William Blake
Window
by Carl Sandburg
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House or Window Flies

 
by John Clare

These little window dwellers, in cottages and halls, were always entertaining to me; after dancing in the window all day from sunrise to sunset they would sip of the tea, drink of the beer, and eat of the sugar, and be welcome all summer long. They look like things of mind or fairies, and seem pleased or dull as the weather permits. In many clean cottages and genteel houses, they are allowed every liberty to creep, fly, or do as they like; and seldom or ever do wrong. In fact they are the small or dwarfish portion of our own family, and so many fairy familiars that we know and treat as one of ourselves.







This poem appeared in Poem-A-Day on February 10, 2013. Browse the Poem-A-Day archive.
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