I. 
 
Your ghost will walk, you lover of trees, 
    (If our loves remain) 
    In an English lane, 
By a cornfield-side a-flutter with poppies. 
Hark, those two in the hazel coppice--- 
A boy and a girl, if the good fates please, 
    Making love, say,--- 
    The happier they! 
Draw yourself up from the light of the moon, 
And let them pass, as they will too soon, 
    With the bean-flowers' boon,  
    And the blackbird's tune, 
    And May, and June! 
 
 II. 
 
What I love best in all the world 
Is a castle, precipice-encurled, 
In a gash of the wind-grieved Apennine 
Or look for me, old fellow of mine, 
(If I get my head from out the mouth 
O' the grave, and loose my spirit's bands, 
And come again to the land of lands)--- 
In a sea-side house to the farther South, 
Where the baked cicala dies of drouth, 
And one sharp tree---'tis a cypress---stands, 
By the many hundred years red-rusted, 
Rough iron-spiked, ripe fruit-o'ercrusted, 
My sentinel to guard the sands 
To the water's edge. For, what expands 
Before the house, but the great opaque 
Blue breadth of sea without a break? 
While, in the house, for ever crumbles 
Some fragment of the frescoed walls, 
From blisters where a scorpion sprawls. 
A girl bare-footed brings, and tumbles 
Down on the pavement, green-flesh melons, 
And says there's news to-day---the king 
Was shot at, touched in the liver-wing, 
Goes with his Bourbon arm in a sling: 
---She hopes they have not caught the felons. 
Italy, my Italy! 
Queen Mary's saying serves for me--- 
    (When fortune's malice 
    Lost her---Calais)--- 
Open my heart and you will see 
Graved inside of it, ``Italy.'' 
Such lovers old are I and she: 
So it always was, so shall ever be!
Robert Browning
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/de-gustibus/