Esc is ; % ey . z ee ae ate te ae a coe ue PLUM d oh Us S % —— ie = é = a) = yw oe ae a et Ss i : SAD MER aT, VUE OW UE UCI TEN VV WV VN ONY VV Wy en es Mae Eee ) { oa ih : ie: we: eet 7 © ~~ oe! Os, fe AAalok nlslaai i Ate ee cic haniaaasehld b ery « Ss . % le be ee ee ee Le i r, Ee BEE y « exter © j ibs SKE stteener” : pstORCeSERSOCESBDELABLGEBES ¢ Re At ei 26s Ke, Y ‘e > Was * > a Se RP eee ee tn He Ht AS * 2 aes! i i, ee BE | 2 8 a ves Sete meeeveveve ba hk vvreveveverevre DAbehbehs das. Sl dh a A alk hl lh Amy =U ites. Mei Studer its +> aan ea et AOA OOO : a hs t) ity BLANEY J | ar es r ’ * 7 a - " : ‘ ‘ 7 « “ > cd #! =e \ PY * * . ~e . +. om A 3 , me s ue > wR raes's . 5 oe ( » ’ “ > « *¥. a 5 Mur English Lakes, feces TAINS; AND WATEREALELS, ff * J RYDAL MOUNT. WORDSWORTH'S RESIDENCE FRONTISPIECE, Mur English Lakes, MOUNTAINS, AND WATERFALLS, AS SEEN BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH. Photographically Illuftrated. “Ah! that fuch beauty, varying in the light Of living nature, cannot be portrayed By words, nor by the pencil’s filent fill ; But is the property of him alone Who hath beheld it, noted it with care, And in his mind recorded it with love.” . The Excurfion. London ; A. W. BENNETT, 5, BISHOPSGATE WITHOUT. PHOT ay 1868. ae : ; rt . dN gN Fie . y /) ® % a GRESHAM STEAM PRESS, BUCKLERSBURY, I s, IN BROTHER UNW INTRODUCTION. re petty N the following Jelettion from Word/worth's 4 Poetical MES the Compiler has availed or extracts aii his longer poems, as refer expreffly to the Scenery of his beloved native country of Cumberland and Weftmoreland; and has, as far as pratticable, claffified these extracts under the heads of the different Lakes or other objects of intereft in each locality. By this arrangement it is believed that not only will the Reader be able, with the affiftance of the Photographic Illuftrations, which have been taken by Mr. T. Ocie /pecially for this work, to appreciate the more fully Wordfworths wonderfully true defcriptions of the vi INTRODUCTION. beauties of Nature; but the Tourift will have the addi- tional pleafure of identifying with his own favourite fpot any of the poet’s verfes which refer efpectially to it. November, 1864. A Jecond edition of this work having been called for within Jo comparatively fhort a time, is a gratifying proof that the efforts of the Compiler and Publifher to render additionally attrattive this Jeleétion of Word/worth’s Poems, have been appreciated by the public. There has been fome alteration in the pieces Jelected for this edition. April, 1866. A third edition has furnifhed an opportunity for giving Several new photographic illuftrations, in place of fome of the old ones. Oétober, 1867. CONTENTS. PAGE Extraé from the Conclufion 4 a Poem, ee upon ae School ... ui aoe daa 2 I Winandermere. An Evening Walk ae oe Brathay Church ... ech ol 2 The Valley of Winander and aha er stems, kL Image in the Stream .., 2 sak Cepia 15. Ifland on the Lake 21 22 There was a Boy Efthwaite. Lines left upon a Seat in a Yew-Tree, which ftands near the Lake of Efthwaite, on a defolate part of the Shore commanding a beautiful profpect ap alt To his Brother se ove su “re Vill CONTENTS. PAGE Langdale. : Blea Dern... ee BS ry ee ete Langdale Pikes 4 a me mre ave) eee Scene in the Valley ... oe ee me ie Sages The Grandeur of Mountain Scenery .. gia The Idle Shepherd-Boys 3 or, Digtew Ghyll Toe 40 The Rotha. To ‘foanna ... sis! ae iy nee gues Rydale. Emma’s Dell bee ae se was Jae aes Wordfworth’s Hill ... fe oon Pee | Mary Wordfworth’s Nook ; to M. H. ie j 52 Written with a Slate-pencil upon a Stone, the legen of a Heap lying near a Deferted poe” upon one of the Iflands at Rydale ao : 53 To my Sifter ... a pe ey ie Pe ou. Grasmere. On approaching Home after a Tour in Scotland, 1803 58 4 Walk by the Lake... a ae ae nis eae Helm Crag... 62 Written with a Pencil ve a gens in ee Wall of re FHHoufe (an Out-houfe) on the see at Grafmere 63 Michael oo os an Say Ree A Farewell ... a a ae on a: aaa CONTENTS. Helvellyn. Fidelity ’Tis faid that fome have ae Love Derwent-water. Sonnet to Skiddaw The Childle/s Father .. Infcription for the Su where the eens fod on St. Herbert's Ifland, Derwent-water Brougham Caftle. Song, at the Feaft of Brougham Ca/ftle, upon the Reftoration of Lord Clifford, the Shepherd, to the Eftates and Honours of his Anceftors Black Comb. Written with a Slate-pencil, on a Stone, on the fide of the Mountain of Black Comb, Cumberland ... View from the Top of Black Comb, Cumberland To the River Duddon The Brothers OF a 97 105 106 108 109 Xx CONTENTS. PAGE Defcriptions of Scenery. | Influence of Natural Objeéts in calling forth and Strengthening the Imagination in Boyhood and Early Youth ... ay oe Be ee A Summer Forenoon ... + ae A sao Lines written while Sailing in a Boat at Evening ... 134 A Night-piece soe ane a ai ice ae Nutting oh ig aa we oy pot Aa Lines written in early Spring ai he ee My Heart leaps up .. sft are a Bes el Yew-Trees ... ie vit ee a cas a Sonnet toa Brook ... e I41 Admonition, intended more paptiealers for the perufil of thofe who may have happened to be enamoured of fome beautiful Place of Retreat in the Country of the Lakes... a oe Ee in ee Sonnets oe aes a ve re It 1s a beauteous Evening ... at Peis? Calm is all nature as a Refting Wheel 4 ae ae Domettic Poems. — The Pet Lamb ae a: ai a aot ae Lucy Gray; or Solitude ben #2 shes i eae Three years fhe grew in Sun and Shower... Bre! She was a Phantom of Delight re wae etre CONTENTS. Poems on Flowers. To the Daijy... To the fame Flower ... To the {mall Celandine To the fame Flower ... Daffodils... iby ey To the Rock in the Orchard... The Waterfall and the Eglantine The Oak and the Broom Poems on Birds. The Green Linnet To a Skylark... To the Cuckoo To a Nightingale The Sparrow’s Nef ... Intimations of Immortality ... Lift of Illuftrations. PHOTOGRAPHED BY THOMAS OGLE. Printed by Russell Sedgfield, Norbiton, nS Go RYDAL MOUNT: WORDSWORTH’S RESIDENCE . . . . Froytifpiece. BLEA TARN; LANGDALE.” 1 4. ss pg DUNGEON-GHYLL .0 6 a oe VIEW ON THE ROTHA’ >. 4 8 RYDALE FALLS 6 ou ee RYDALE WATER, AND NAB SCAR . °, °°, 22 ene GRASMERE; FROM-RED BANK ~~... ) eee DERWENT-WATER » 9. ia ose) vn wo ULLESWATER; FROM GOWBARROW. << 2 HONISTER CRAG; LOORING WEST °3 >...) . (4) VEW-TREES; BORROWDALE. <4. «- | >. STOCK-GHVLL FORCE; NEAR AMBLESIDE , . 4) WORDSWORTAH’S TOMB; GRASMERE CHURCH-YARD mi, (2) ee EXTRACT FROM THE CONCLUSION OF A POEM, COMPOSED UPON LEAVING SCHOOL. j 4 EAR native regions, I foretell, @ From what I feel at this farewell, 7. That, wherefoe’er my fteps fhall tend, , And whenfoe’er my courfe fhall end, If in that hour a fingle tie Survive of local fympathy, My foul will caft the backward view, The longing look alone on you. Thus, when the fun, prepared for reft, Hath gained the precincts of the weft, Though his departing radiance fail To illuminate the hollow vale, A lingering light he fondly throws On the dear hills where firft he rofe. ‘he 4 W inandermere. eOnSo AN EVENING WALK. a= ) AR from my deareft Friend, ’tis mine to rove : Through bare grey dell, high wood, and _paftoral Ned COVE ; sd ¢ aN His wizard courfe where hoary Derwent takes, ¢ BS 1 Thro’ crags and foreft glooms and opening lakes, Ry Staying his filent waves, to hear the roar bi. That ftuns the tremulous cliffs of high Lodore ; \i@3_ Where peace to Grafmere’s lonely ifland leads, To willowy hedge-rows, and to emerald meads: Leads to her bridge, rude church, and cottaged grounds, Her rocky fheepwalks, and her woodland bounds ; Where, bofom’d deep, the fhy Winander peeps *Mid cluftering ifles, and holly-fprinkled fteeps : Where twilight glens endear my Efthwaite’s fhore, And memory of departed pleafures more. WINANDERMERE. Fair fcenes, erewhile, I taught, a happy child, The echoes of your rocks my carols wild : Then did no ebb of cheerfulnefs demand Sad tides of joy from melancholy’s hand, In youth’s wild eye the livelong day was bright, The fun at morning, and the ftars at night, Alike, when firft the vales the bittern fills Or the firft woodcocks roamed the moonlight hills. In thoughtlefs gaiety I courfed the plain, And hope itfelf was all I knew of pain ; For then, even then, the little heart would beat At times, while young Content forfook her feat, And wild Impatience, pointing upward, fhowed, Where, tipp’d with gold, the mountain fummits glowed. Alas! the idle tale of man is found Depicted in the dia!’s moral round ; With hope reflection blends her focial rays To gild the total tablet of his days ; Yet ftill, the fport of fome malignant power, He knows but from its fhade the prefent hour. But why, ungrateful, dwell on idle pain? To fhow her yet fome joys to me remain, Say, will my Friend, with foft affeQion’s ear, The hiftory of a poet’s evening hear ? AN EVENING WALK. When, in the fouth, the wan noon, brooding ftill, Breathed a pale {team around the glaring hill, And fhades of deep-embattled clouds were feen, Spotting the northern cliffs with lights between ; Gazing the tempting fhades to them denied, — When ftood the fhortened herds amid the tide, Where from the barren wall’s unfheltered end Long rails into the fhallow lake extend. When fchool-boys ftretched their length upon the oreen 3 And round the humming elm, a glimmering fcene, In the brown park, in flocks the troubled deer Shook the ftill-twinkling tail and glancing ear ; When horfes in the wall-girt intake ftood, Unfhaded, eying far below the flood, Crowded behind the fwain, in mute diftrefs, With forward neck the clofing gate to prefs — Then, as I wandered where the huddling rill Brightens with water-breaks the hollow ghyll, ‘To where, while thick above the branches clofe, In dark brown bafon its wild waves repofe, Inverted fhrubs, and mofs of darkeft green, Cling from the rocks, with pale wood-weeds between ; Save that aloft the fubtile funbeams fhine On withered briars that o’er the crags recline ; Sole light admitted here, a {mall cafcade, I]lumines with fparkling foam the twilight fhade ; WINANDERMERE. Beyond, along the vifta of the brook, Where antique roots its buftling path o’erlook, The eye repofes on a fecret bridge, | Half grey, half fhagged with ivy to its ridge. Sweet rill, farewell! ‘“[o-morrow’s noon again Shall hide me, wooing long thy wildwood ftrain ; But now the fun has gained his weftern road, And eve’s mild hour invites my fteps abroad. While, near the midway cliff, the filvered kite In many a whiftling circle wheels her flight ; Slant watery lights, from parting clouds, apace Travel along the precipice’s bafe : Cheering its naked wafte of f{cattered ftone, By lichens grey, and fcanty mofs, o’ergrown ; Where fcarce the foxglove peeps, or thiftle’s beard; And reftlefs ftone-chat all day long is heard. How pleafant, as the yellowing fun declines, And with long rays and fhades the landfcape fhines ; To mark the birches’ ftems all golden light, That lit the dark flant woods with filvery white ; The willow’s weeping trees, that twinkling hoar, Glanced oft upturned along the breezy fhore, Low bending o’er the coloured water, fold Their movelefs boughs and leaves like threads of gold ; AN EVENING WALK. The fkiffs with naked matfts at anchor laid, Before the boat-houfe peeping through the fhade , The unwearied glance of woodman’s echoed ftroke ; And curling from the trees the cottage fmoke. Their panniered train a group of potters goad, Winding from fide to fide up the fteep road ; The peafant, from yon cliff of fearful edge Shot, down the headlong path darts with his fledge ; Bright beams the lonely mountain-horfe illume Feeding ’mid purple heath, green rings, and broom ; While the fharp flope the flackened team confounds, Downward the ponderous timber-wain refounds ; In foamy breaks the rill, with merry fong, Dafhed down the rough rock, lightly leaps along ; From lonefome chapel, at the mountain’s feet, Three humble bells their ruftic chime repeat ; Sounds from the waterfide the hammered boat ; And blafted quarry thunders, heard remote! Even here, amid the fweep of endlefs woods, Blue pomp of lakes, high cliffs, and falling floods, Not undelightful are the fimpleft charms, Found by the grafly door of mountain-farms. Sweetly ferocious, round his native walks, Pride of his filter-wives, the monarch ftalks ; 8 WINANDERMERE. Spur-clad his nervous feet, and firm his tread ; A creft of purple tops his warrior head ; Bright {parks his black and rolling eye-ball hurls Afar, his tail he clofes and unfurls ; On tiptoe reared, he ftrains his clarion throat, Threatened by faintly-anfwering farms remote. mw Bright’ning the cliffs between where fombrous pine And yew-trees o’er the filver rocks recline ; I love to mark the quarry’s moving trains, Dwarf panniered fteeds, and men, and numerous wains ; How bufy the enormous hive within, While Echo dallies with the various din ! Some (hardly heard their chifels’ clinking found) Toil, {mall as pigmies in the gulf profound ; Some, dim between th’ aerial cliffs defcried, O’erwalk the flender plank from fide to fide ; Thefe, by the pale-blue rocks that ceafelefs ring, Glad from their airy bafkets hang, and fing. Hung o’er a cloud above the fteep that rears Its edge all flame, the broadening fun appears ; A long blue bar its zgis orb divides, And breaks the {preading of its golden tides ; And now it touches on the purple fteep _ That flings his fhadow on the pictured deep. AN EVENING WALK. *Crofs the calm lake’s blue fhades the cliffs afpire, With towers and woods, a “ profpect all on fire; ”’ The coves and fecret hollows, through a ray Of fainter gold, a purple gleam betray. The gilded turf arrays in richer green Each fpeck of Jawn the broken rocks between, Deep yellow beams the fcattered boles illume, Far in the level foreft’s central gloom. Waving his hat, the fhepherd, in the vale, Directs his winding dog the cliffs to fcale,— That barking, bufy, ’mid the glittering rocks, Hunts, where he points, the intercepted flocks. Where oaks o’erhang the road the radiance fhoots On tawny earth, wild weeds, and twifted roots : The druid-ftones their lighted fane unfold ; And all the babbling brooks are liquid gold ; Sunk to a curve, the day-ftar leffens ftill, Gives one bright glance, and drops behind the hill. In thefe lone vales, if aught of faith may claim, Their filver hairs, and ancient hamlet fame, When up the hills, as now, retreats the light‘, Strange apparitions mock the village fight. A defperate form appears, that fpurs his {teed Along the midway cliffs with violent {peed ; : , Io W INANDERMERE., Unhurt purfues his lengthened flight, while all Attend, at every ftretch, his headlong fall. Anon, in order mounts, a gorgeous fhow Of horfemen-fhadows moving to and fro ; And now the van is gilt with evening’s beam ; ‘The rear through iron brown betrays a fullen gleam, While filent ftands the admiring crowd below, Loft gradual o’er the heights in pomp they go, Till, but the lonely beacon, all is fled That tips with eve’s lateft gleam his fpiry head. Now, while the folemn evening fhadows fail, On red flow-waving pinions, down the vale ; How pleafant near the tranquil lake to ftray, Where winds the road along a fecret bay, In all the majefty of eafe divides, And glorying looks around the filent tides ; Along the ‘ wild meandering fhore” to view, Obfequious grace the winding fwan purfue ; He {wells his lifted cheft and backward flings His bridling neck between his tow’ring wings ; On as he floats, the filvered waters glow, Proud of the varying arch and movelefs form of fnow, While tender cares and mild domettic loves With furtive watch purfue her as fhe moves, The female with a meeker charm fucceeds, And her brown little-ones around her leads, «* . * a ‘ 4 ss AN EVENING WALK. Nibbling the water lilies as they pafs, Or playing wanton with the floating grafs. She, in a mother’s care, her beauty’s pride Forgets, unwearied watching every fide ; Alternately they mount her back, and reft Clofe by her mantling wings’ embraces prett. Long may they roam thefe hermit waves, that fleep In birch-befprinkled cliffs embofomed deep, Thefe fairy holms untrodden, ftill, and green, Whofe fhades protect the hidden wave ferene, Whence fragrance fcents the water’s defert gale, The violet and lily of the vale ! Where, though her far-off twilight ditty fteal, They not the trip of harmlefs milk-maid feel ; Yon tuft conceals their home, their cottage bower ; Frefh water-rufhes ftrew the verdant floor ; Long grafs and willows form the woven wall, And {wings above the roof the poplar tall. Thence iffuing oft unwieldy as they ftalk, They crufh with broad black feet their flowery walk ; Safe from your door ye hear at breezy morn The hound, the horfe’s tread, and mellow horn ; No ruder found your defert haunts invades Than waters dafhing wild, or rocking fhades, Ye ne’er, like haplefs human wanderers, throw Your young on winter’s winding-fheet of fnow. Li WINANDERMERE. Fair Swan ! by all a mother’s joys carefled, Haply fome wretch has eyed, and called thee bleffed ; I fee her now, denied to lay her head, On cold blue nights, in hut or ftraw-built fhed, Turn to a filent fmile their fleepy cry, x By pointing to a fhooting ftar on high. —-When low-hung clouds each ftar of fummer hide, And firelefs are the valleys far and wide, Where the brook brawls along the public road Dark with bat-haunted afhes ftretching broad, Oft has fhe taught them on her lap to play Delighted with the glowworm’s harmlefs ray, Tofs light from hand to hand, while on the ground Small circles of green radiance gleam around. Oh! when the bitter fhowers her path affail, And roars between the hills the torrent gale ; No more her breath can thaw their fingers cold, Their frozen arms her neck no more can fold ; Weak roof a cowering form two babes to fhield, And faint the fire a dying heart can yield ! Prefs the fad kifs, fond mother ! vainly fears Thy flooded cheek to wet them with its tears ; No tears can chill them, and no bofom warms, Thy breaft their death-bed, coffined in thine arms ! AN EVENING WALK. 13 Sweet are the founds that mingle from afar, Heard by calm lakes, as peeps the folding ftar, Where the duck dabbles ’mid the ruftling fedge, And feeding pike ftarts from the water’s edge, Or the fwan ftirs the reeds, his neck and bill Wetting, that drip upon the water ftill ; And heron, as refounds the trodden fhore, Shoots upward, darting his long neck before. Now, with religious awe, the farewell light Blends with the folemn colouring of night ; °>Mid groves of clouds that creft the mountain’s brow, And round the weft’s proud lodge their fhadows throw, Like Una fhining on her gloomy way, The half-feen form of Twilight roams aftray ; Shedding, through paly loop-holes mild and fmall, Gleams that upon the lake’s ftill bofom fall ; Soft o’er the furface creep thofe luftres pale Tracking the fitful motions of the gale. With reftlefs interchange at once the bright Wins on the fhade, the fhade upon the light. No favoured eye was e’er allowed to gaze On lovelier fpectacle in fairy days ; When gentle Spirits urged a fportive chafe, Brufhing with lucid wands the water’s face ; While mufic, ftealing round the glimmering deeps, Charmed the tall circle of the enchanted fteeps. 14 WINANDERMERE. —The lights are vanifhed from the watery plains : No wreck of all the pageantry remains. Unheeded, night has overcome the vales : On the dark earth the baffled vifion fails ; The lateft lingerer of the foreft train, The lone black fir, forfakes the faded plain ; Laft evening fight, the cottage fmoke, no more, Loft in the thickened darknefs, glimmers hoar ; And, towering from the fullen dark-brown mere, Like a black wall, the mountain fteeps appear. —Now o’er the foothed accordant heart we feel A fympathetic twilight flowly fteal, And ever, as we fondly mufe, we find — The foft gloom deepening on the tranquil mind. Stay ! penfive fadly-pleafing vifions, ftay ! Ah no! as fades the vale, they fade away : Yet ftill the tender, vacant gloom remains ;. Still the cold cheek its fhuddering tear retains. The bird, who ceafed, with fading light, to thread Silent the hedge or fteamy rivulet’s bed, From his grey re-appearing tower fhall foon Salute with boding note the rifing moon, Frofting with hoary light the pearly ground, And pouring deeper blue to Aéther’s bound; And pleafed, her folemn pomp of clouds to fold In robes of azure, fleecy-white, and gold. AN EVENING WALK. See o’er the eaftern hill, where darknefs broods O’er all its vanifhed dells, and lawns, and woods ,; Where but a mafs of fhade the fight can trace, She lifts in filence up her lovely face : Above the gloomy valley flings her light, Far to the weftern flopes with hamlets white: And gives, where woods the chequered upland ftrew, ‘To the green corn of fummer, autumn’s hue. Thus Hope, firft pouring from her blefled horn Her dawn, far lovelier than the moon’s own morn, Till higher mounted, ftrives in vain to cheer The weary hills, impervious, blackening near ; Yet does fhe ftill, undaunted throw the while On darling {pots remote her tempting fmile. Even now fhe decks for me a diftant {cene, (For dark and broad the gulf of time between,) Gilding that cottage with her fondeft ray, (Sole bourn, fole wifh, fole object of my way ; How fair its lawns and fheltering woods appear ; How {weet its ftreamlet murmurs in mine ear ! ) Where we, my Friend, to happy days {hall rife, Till our fmall fhare of hardly-paining fighs (For fighs will ever trouble human breath) Creep hufhed into the tranquil breaft of death. WINANDERMERE. But now the clear bright Moon her zenith gains, And, rimy without fpeck, extend the plains : The deepeft cleft the mountain’s front difplays Scarce hides a fhadow from her fearching rays ; From the dark-blue faint filvery threads divide The hills, while gleams below the azure tide ; ‘The f{cene is wakened, yet its peace unbroke By filvered wreaths of quiet charcoal fmoke, ‘That o’er the ruins of the fallen wood Steal down the hill, and fpread along the flood. The fong of mountain-{treams, unheard by day, Now hardly heard, beguiles my homeward way. - All air is like the fleeping water, ftill, Lift’ning the aérial mufic of the hill, Broke only by the flow clock tolling deep, Or fhout that wakes the ferry-man from fleep, | The echoed hoof approaching the far fhore, Soon followed by his hollow parting oar ; Sound of clofed gate acrofs the water borne, Hurrying the feeding hare through ruftling corn ; The tremulous fob of the complaining owl ; And at long intervals the mill-dog’s howl ; The diftant forge’s fwinging thump profound ; Or yell, in the deep woods, of lonely hound. BRATHAY CHURCH AND VALLEY OF WINANDER. 17 BRATHAY CHURCH. So we defcend, and winding round a rock, Attain a point that fhowed the valley—{ftretched In length before us; and, not diftant far, Upon a rifing ground a grey Church-tower, Whofe battlements were fcreened by tufted trees. And towards a cryftal Mere, that lay beyond Among fteep hills and woods embofomed, flowed A copious ftream with boldly-winding courfe ; Here traceable, there hidden—there again . To fight reftored, and glittering in the fun. On the ftream’s bank, and everywhere, appeared Fair dwellings, fingle, or in focial knots ; Some fcattered o’er the level, others perched On the hill-fides, a cheerful quiet fcene, Now in its morning purity arrayed. From “*The Excurfimn,” Book V. THE VALLEY OF WINANDER AND BRATHAY CHURCH. . Right acrofs the lake Our pinnace moves ; then, coafting creek and bay, Glades we beheld, and into thickets peeped, D 18 WINANDERMERE. ‘ Where couch the fpotted deer; or raifed our eyes ‘To fhaggy fteeps on which the carelefs goat Browfed by the fide of dafhing waterfalls ; Thus did the bark, meandering with the fhore, Purfue her voyage, till a point was gained Where a projecting line of rock, that framed A natural pier, invited us to land. Alert to follow as the Paftor led, We clomb a green hill’s fide ; and thence obtained Slowly, a lefs and lefs obftructed fight Of the flat meadows and indented coaft Of the whole lake, in compafs feen: far off And yet confpicuous, ftood the old Church-tower, In majefty prefiding o’er the vale And all her dwellings ; feemingly preferved From the intrufion of a reftlefs world By rocks impaflable and mountains huge, Soft heath this elevated fpot fupplied, With refting-place of mofly ftone; and there We fate reclined ; admiring quietly The frame and general afpect of the fcene ; And each not feldom eager to make known His own difcoveries ; or to favourite points Dire€ting notice, merely from a with” To impart a joy, imperfect while unfhared. BRATHAY CHURCH AND VALLEY OF WINANDER., 19 That rapturous moment ne’er fhall I forget, © When thefe particular interefts were effaced From every mind !—already had the fun, Sinking with lefs than ordinary ftate, Attained his weftern bound ;. but rays of light— Now fuddenly diverging from the orb Retired behind the mountain tops or veiled By the denfe air—fhot upwards to the crown Of the blue firmament—aloft, and wide : And multitudes of little floating clouds, Pierced through their thin ethereal mould—ere we, Who faw, of change were confcious—had become Vivid as fire: clouds feparately poifed,— Innumerable multitude of forms Scattered through half the circle of the {ky ; And giving back, and fhedding each on each, With prodigal communion, the bright hues Which from the unapparent fount of glory They had imbibed, and ceafed not to receive, That which the heavens difplayed, the liquid deep Repeated ; but with unity fublime! From “ The Excurfion,” Book LX. 20 WINANDERMERE. IMAGE IN THE STREAM. F a we went, And Mees the valley on the ftreamlet’s bank Purfued our way, a broken company, Mute or converfing, fingle or in pairs. Thus having reached a bridge, that overarched The hafty rivulet where it lay becalmed In a deep pool, by happy chance we faw A two-fold image; on a grafly bank A f{now-white ram, and in the cryftal- flood Another and the fame! Moft beautiful, On the green turf, with his imperial front. Shaggy and bold, and wreathed horns fuperb, The breathing creature ftood; as beautiful Beneath him, fhowed his fhadowy counterpart. Each had his glowing mountains, each his fky, And each feemed centre of his own fair world : Antipodes unconf{cious of each other, Yet, in partition, with their feveral {pheres,. Blended in perfect ftillness to our fight! From ** The Excurfion,” Book 1X, ISLAND ON THE LAKE, 21 ISLAND ON THE LAKE. Grateful tafk !—to me Pregnant with recollections of the time When on thy bofom, fpacious Windermere! A Youth, I practifed this delightful art ; Toffed on the waves alone, or ’mid a crew Of joyous comrades. Now the reedy marge Cleared, with a ftrenuous arm I dipped the oar Free from obftruction ; and the boat advanced Through cryftal water, {moothly as a hawk, That, difentangled from the fhady boughs Of fome thick wood, her place of covert, cleaves With correfponding wings the abyfs of air. — Obferve,” the Vicar faid, ** yon rocky ifle With birch-trees fringed ; my hand fhall guide the helm, While thitherward we bend our courfe ; or while We feek that other, on the weftern fhore, Where the bare columns of thofe lofty firs, Supporting gracefully a mafly dome Of fombre foliage, feem to imitate A Grecian temple rifing from the Deep.” From ““ The Excurfion,” Book 1X. 22 WINANDERMERE., THERE WAS A BOY. ee There was a boy; ye knew him well, ye cliffs And iflands of Winander! Many a time, At evening, when the earlieft ftars began To move along the edges of the hills, Rifing or fetting, would he ftand alone, Beneath the trees, or by the glimmering lake ; And there, with fingers interwoven, both hands Preff’d clofely palm to palm, and to his mouth Uplifted, he, as through an inftrument, Blew mimic hootings to the filent owls, That they might anfwer him. And they would fhout Acrofs the watery vale, and fhout again, | Refponfive to his call,—with quivering peals, And long halloos, and fereams, and echoes loud Redoubled and redoubled ; concourfe wild Of mirth and jocund din! And, when it chanced That paufes of deep filence mock’d his fkill, Then, fometimes, in that filence, while he hung Liftening, a gentle fhock of mild furprife Has carried far into his heart the voice Of mountain torrents ; or the vifible fcene THERE WAS A BOY. Would enter unawares into his mind With all its folemn imagery, its rocks, Its woods, and that uncertain heaven, received Into the befom of the fteady lake. This boy was taken from his mates, and died In childhood, ere he was full twelve years old. Fair are the woods, and beauteous is the fpot, The vale where he was born ; the churchyard hangs Upon a flope above the village fchool ; And there, along that bank, when I have paff’d At evening, I believe that oftentimes A lonz half-hour together I have ftood ~Mute—looking at the grave in which he lies! 23 Esthwaite. wis LINES Left upon a Seat ina Yew-Tree, which ftands near the Lake of Efthwaite, on a defolate part of the fhore commanding a beautiful profpect. Ma Y apa ONG = } AY, Traveller! reft. This lonely Yew-tree ftands ”* Far from all human dwelling: what if here No {parkling rivulet {pread the verdant herb ? What if thefe barren boughs the bee not loves? Yet, if the wind breathe foft, the curling waves That break again{ft the fhore, fhall lull thy mind By one foft impulfe faved from vacancy. Who he was That piled thefe ftones, and with the mofly fod Firft covered o’er, and taught this aged tree With its dark arms to form a circling bower, I well remember.—He was one who owned No common foul. In youth by fcience nurfed, - ee, SS Se oe ee oe ee LINES LEFT UPON A SEAT, ETC, And led by Nature into a wild fcene Of lofty hopes, he to the world went forth A favoured being, knowing no defire Which genius did not hallow,—’gainft the taint Of diffolute tongues, and jealoufy, and hate, And fcorn,—againft all enemies prepared, All but neglect. ‘The world, for fo it thought, Owed him no fervice ; wherefore he at once With indignation turned himfelf away, And with the food of pride fuftained his foul In folitude.—Stranger ! thefe gloomy boughs Had charms for him ; and here he loved to fit, His only vifitants a ftraggling fheep, The ftone-chat, or the fand-lark, And on thefe barren rocks, with juniper, And heath and thiftle, thinly fprinkled o’er, Fixing his downcaft eye, he many an hour A morbid pleafure nourifhed, tracing here An emblem of his own unfruitful life : And lifting up his head, he then would gaze On the more diftant f{cene,—how lovely ’tis Thou feeft,—and he would gaze till it became Far lovelier, and his heart could not fuftain The beauty, ftill more beauteous! Nor, that time, When Nature had fubdued him to herfelf, Would he forget thofe beings, to whofe minds, Warm from the labours of benevolence, E > 26 ESTHWAITE. The world, and man himfelf, appeared a fcene Of kindred lovelinefs : then he would figh With mournful joy, to think that others felt What he muft never feel: and fo, loft Man ! On vifionary views would fancy feed, Till his eye ftreamed with tears. In this deep vale He died,—this feat his only monument. If ‘Thou be one whofe heart the holy forms Of young imagination have kept pure, Stranger! henceforth be warned; and know that pride, Howe’er difguifed in his own majetfty, Ts littlenefs ; that he who feels contempt For any living thing, hath faculties Which he hath never ufed; that thought with him Is in its infancy. “The man whofe eye Is ever on himfelf, doth look on one, The leaft of Nature’s works, one who might move The wife man to that fcorn which wifdom holds Unlawful, ever. O be wifer, thou ! Inftructed that true knowledge leads to love, True dignity abides with him alone Who, in the filent hour of inward thought, Can ftill fufpe@, and ftill revere himfelf, In lowlinefs of heart. TO HIS BROTHER. TO HIS BROTHER. When, to the attractions of the bufy world, Preferring ftudious leifure, I had chofen A habitation in this peaceful vale, Sharp feafon followed of continual ftorm In deepeft Winter ; and from week to week, Pathway, and lane, and public road, were clogged With frequent fhowers of fnow. Upon a hill, At a fhort diftance from my cottage, ftands A ftately fir-grove, whither I was wont To haften, for I found, beneath the roof Of that perennial fhade, a cloiftral place Of refuge, with an unincumbered floor. Here, in fafe covert, on the fhallow fnow, And fometimes on a {peck of vifible earth, The red-breaft near me hopped; nor was I loth To fympathize with vulgar coppice birds That, for proteCtion from the nipping blaft, Hither repaired.—A fingle beech-tree grew Within this grove of firs; and on the fork Of that one beech, appeared a thrufh’s neft, A laft year’s neft, confpicuoufly built At fuch {mall elevation from the ground & es 28 ESTHWAITE. As gave fure fign that they who in that houfe Of nature and of love had made their home Amid the fir-trees all the Summer long, Dwelt in a tranquil fpot. And often-times A few fheep, ftragglers from fome mountain-flock, Would watch my motions with fufpicious ftare, From the remoteft outfkirts of the grove,— Some nook where they had made their final ftand, Huddling together from two fears—the fear Of me and of the ftorm. Full many an hour Here did I lofe. But in this grove the trees Had been fo thickly planted, and had thriven In fuch perplexed and intricate array, That vainly did I feek, between their ftems, A length of open fpace,—where to and fro My feet might move without concern or care : And, baffled thus, before the ftorm relaxed, I ceafed that fhelter to frequent,—and prized, Lefs than I wifhed to prize, that calm recefs. The fnows diffolved, and genial Spring returned To clothe the fields with verdure. Other haunts Meanwhile were mine; till, one bright April day, By chance retiring from the glare of noon To this forfaken covert, there I found A hoary pathway traced between the trees, And winding on with fuch an eafy line _ TO HIS BROTHER. Along a natural opening, that I ftood, Much wondering at my own fimplicity, How I could e’er have made a fruitlefs fearch For what was now fo obvious, At the fight Conviction alfo flafhed upon my mind That this fame path (within the fhady grove Begun and ended) by my Brother’s fteps Had been imprefied.—To fojourn a fhort while Beneath my roof, he from the barren feas Had newly come—a cherifhed vifitant ! And much did it delight me to perceive That to this opportune recefs allured, He had furveyed it with a finer eye, A heart more wakeful ; that, more loth to part From place fo lovely, he had worn the track By pacing here, unwearied and alone, In that habitual reftleffnefs of foot With which the failor meafures o’er and o’er His fhort domain upon the veflel’s deck, While fhe is travelling through the dreary fea. When thou hadft quitted Efthwaite’s pleafant fhore, And taken thy firft leave of thofe green hills And rocks that were the play-ground of thy youth, Year followed year, my Brother! and we two, Converfing not, knew little in what mould Each other’s minds were fafhioned ; and at length, When once again we met in Grafmere Vale, 29 30 ESTHWAITE. Between us there was little other bond ‘Than common feelings of fraternal love. But thou, a fchool-boy, to the fea hadft carried Undying recollections ; Nature there Was with thee ; fhe, who loved us both, fhe ftill Was with thee; and even fo didft thou become A filent poet ; from the folitude Of the vaft fea didft bring a watchful heart Still couchant, an inevitable ear, And an eye practifed like a blind man’s touch. Back to the joylefs ocean thou art gone ; And now I call the pathway by thy name, And love the fir-grove with a perfect love. Thither do I withdraw when cloudlefs funs Shine hot, or wind blows troublefome and {trong : And there I fit at evening, when the fteep Of Silver-How, and Grafmere’s placid lake And one green ifland, gleam between the ftems Of the dark firs, a vifionary fcene ! And, while I gaze upon the fpectacle Of clouded fplendour, on this dream-like fight Of folemn lovelinefs, I think on thee, My Brother, and on all which thou haft loft. Nor feldom, if I rightly guefs, while thou, Muttering the verfes which I muttered firft Among the mountains, through the midnight watch Art pacing to and fro the veflel’s, deck TO HIS BROTHER. In fome far region, here, while o’er my head, At every impulfe of the moving breeze, The fir-grove murmurs with a fea-like found, Alone I tread this path ;—for aught I know, Timing my fteps to thine ; and, with a {tore Of undiftinguifhable fympathies, Mingling moft earneft wifhes for the day When we, and others whom we love, fhall meet A fecond time in Grafmere’s happy vale. 31 Laned ale. ALA BLEA TARN. HESE ferious words Clofed the preparatory notices With which my Fellow-traveller had beguiled The way, while we advanced up that wide vale. Now, fuddenly diverging, he began | To climb upon its weftern fide a ridge Pathlefs and fmooth, a long and fteep afcent, As if the object of his queft had been Some fecret of the mountains, cavern, fall Of water, or fome boaftful eminence Renowned for fplendid profpeét far and wide ; We clomb, without a track to guide our fteps, And on the fummit reached a heathy plain, With a tumultuous wafte of huge hill-tops Before us ; favage region! and I walked In wearinefs : when, all at once, behold ! i wd A =e 2 mi Am * d a! BLEA TARN, LANGDALE, “ ps 3 we BLEA TARN. Beneath our feet, a little Jowly vale, A lowly vale, and yet uplifted high Among the mountains ; even as if the fpot Had been from eldeft time by with of theirs So placed, to be fhut out from all the world ! Urn-like it was in fhape, deep as an urn; “With rocks encompaffed, fave that to the fouth Was one fmall opening, where a heath-clad ridge Supplied a boundary lefs abrupt and clofe ; A quiet, treelefs nook, with two green fields, ~ A liquid pool that glittered in the fun, And one bare dwelling ; one abode, no more ! It feemed the home of poverty and toil, Though not of want: the little fields, made green By hufbandry of many thrifty years, Paid cheerful tribute to the moorland houfe. — There crows the cock, fingle in his domain : The fmall birds find in {pring no thicket there To fhroud them; only from the neighbouring vales The cuckoo, ftraggling up to the hill-tops, Shouteth faint tidings of fome gladder place. Ah! what a fweet Recefs, thought I, is here ! Inftantly throwing down my limbs at eafe Upon a bed of heath ;—full many a fpot Of hidden beauty have I chanced to efpy Among the mountains ; never one like this ; F 33 34 LANGDALE, So lonefome, and fo perfectly fecure ; Not melancholy—no, for it is green, And bright, and fertile, furnifhed in itfelf With the few needful things that life requires. —In rugged arms how {oft it feems to lie, How tenderly protected! Far and near m We have an image of the priftine earth, The planet in its nakednefs : were this Man’s only dwelling, fole appointed feat, Firft, laft, and fingle, in the breathing world, It could not be more quiet : peace is here Or nowhere ;. days unruffled by the gale Of public news or private; years that pafs Forgetfully ; uncalled upon to pay The common penalties of mortal life, Sicknefs, or accident, or grief, or pain. From “ The Excurfion,” Book IT, LANGDALE PIKES. . : ‘ In genial mood, While at our inane banquet thus we fate Fronting the window of that little cell, I could not, ever and anon, forbear To glance an upward look on two huge Peaks, . That from fome other vale peered into this. = 33 i ae LANGDALE PIKES. 35 *¢ Thofe lufty twins, on which your eyes are caft,”’ Exclaimed our hoft, “if here you dwelt, would be Your prized companions.—Many are the notes Which, in his tuneful courfe, the wind draws forth From rocks, woods, caverns, heaths, and dafhing fhores ; And well thofe lofty brethren bear their part In the wild concert—chiefly when the ftorm Rides high; then all the upper air they fill With roaring found, that ceafes not to flow, Like fmoke, along the level of the blaft, In mighty current ; theirs, too, is the fong Of ftream and headlong flood that feldom fails ; And, in the grim and breathlefs hour of noon, Methinks that I have heard them echo back The thunder’s greeting. Nor have nature’s laws Left them ungifted with the power to yield Mufic of finer tone ; a harmony, So do I call it, though it be the hand Of filence, though there be no voice ;—the clouds, The mift, the fhadows, light of golden funs, Motions of moonlight, all come thither—touch, And have an anfwer—thither come, and fhape A language not unwelcome to fick hearts And idle fpirits—there the fun himfelf, At the calm clofe of fummer’s longeft day, Refts his fubftantial orb ; between thofe heights And on the top of either pinnacle, 36 LANGDALE. More keenly than elfewhere in night’s blue vault Sparkle the ftars, as of their {tation proud. Thoughts are not busier in the mind of man Than the mute agents ftirring there.” From “ The Excurfion,” Book I]. SCENE IN THE Jaleo. A Humming Bee—a little tinkling rill— A pair of falcons wheeling on the wing, In clamorous agitation, round the creft Of a tall rock, their airy citadel— By each and all of thefe the penfive ear Was greeted in the filence that enfued, When through the cottage-threfhold we had paffed, And, deep within that lonefome valley, ftood Once more beneath the concave of a blue © And cloudlefs fky.—Anon exclaimed our hoft, Triumphantly difperfing with the taunt The fhade of difcontent which on his brow Had gathered,—“* Ye have left my cell,—but fee How Nature hems you in with friendly arms ! And by her help ye are my prifoners ftill. But which way fhall I lead you f—how contrive, In {pot fo parfimonioufly endowed, SCENE IN “FHE VALLEY. 37 That the brief hours, which yet remain, may reap Some recompence of knowledge or delight?” So faying, round he looked, as if perplexed ; And, to remove thofe doubts, my gray-haired Friend Said—‘‘ Shall we take this pathway for our guide -— Upward it winds, as if, in Summer heats, Its line had firft been fafhioned by the flock Seeking a place of refuge at the root Of yon black Yew-tree, whofe protruded boughs Darken the filver bofom of the crag, From which it draws its meagre fuftenance. There, in commodious fhelter, may we reft. Or let us trace this ftreamlet to its fource ; Feebly it tinkles with an earthy found, And a few fteps may bring us to the fpot Where, haply, crowned with flowerets and green herbs, ‘The mountain infant to the fun comes forth, Like human life from darknefs.”,"—A fudden turn Through a ftraight paflage of encumbered ground, Proved that fuch hope was vain :—for now we ftood Shut out from profpect of the open vale, And faw the water that compofed this rill, Defcending, difembodied, and diffufed O’er the {mooth furface of an ample crag, Lofty, and fteep, and naked as a tower. All further progrefs here was barred ;—And who, - Thought I, if mafter of a vacant hour, 38 LANGDALE, Here would not linger, willingly detained ? Whether to fuch wild objects he were led When copious rains have magnified the ftream _ Into a loud and white-robed waterfall, Or introduced at this more quiet time. Upon a femicirque of turf-clad ground, The hidden nook difcovered to our view A mafs of rock, refembling, as it lay Right at the foot of that moift precipice, A ftranded fhip, with keel upturned, that refts Fearlefs of winds and waves. ‘Three feveral ftones ~ Stood near, of fmaller fize, and not unlike To monumental pillars: and, from thefe Some little {pace difjoined, a pair were feen, That with united fhoulders bore aloft — A fragment like an altar, flat and {mooth: Barren the tablet, yet thereon appeared A tall and fhining holly that had found A hofpitable chink, and ftood upright, As if inferted by fome human hand In mockery, to wither in the fun, Or lay its beauty flat before a breeze, The firft that entered. But no breeze did now Find entrance ;—high or low appeared no trace Of motion, fave the water that defcended, Diffufed adown that barrier of fteep rock, THE GRANDEUR OF MOUNTAIN SCENERY. 39 And foftly creeping like a breath of air, Such as is fometimes feen, and hardly feen, To bruth the ftill breaft of a cryftal lake. From “The Excurfion,’ Book III. THE GRANDEUR OF MOUNTAIN SCENERY. Has not the foul, the being of your life, Received a fhock of awful confcioufnefs, In fome calm feafon, when thefe lofty rocks At night’s approach bring down the unclouded fky To reft upon their circumambient walls ; A temple framing of dimenfions vatt, And yet not too enormous for the found Of human anthems,—choral fong, or burft Sublime of inftrumental harmony, To glorify the Eternal! What if thefe Did never break the ftillnefs that prevails Here,—if the folemn nightingale be mute, And the foft woodlark here did never chant Her vefpers,—Nature fails not to provide Impulfe and utterance. ‘The whifpering air Sends infpiration from the fhadowy heights And blind receffes of the caverned rocks; The little rills and waters numberlefs, 40 LANGDALE. Inaudible by daylight, blend their notes With the loud ftreams: and often, at the hour When iffue forth the firft pale ftars, is heard, Within the circuit of this fabric huge, One voice—the folitary raven, flying Athwart the concave of the dark blue dome, Unfeen, perchance above the power of fight— An iron knell! with echoes from afar Faint—and ftill fainter—as the cry, with which ‘The wanderer accompanies her flight Through the calm region, fades upon the ear, Diminifhing by diftance till it feemed To expire; yet from the abyfs is caught again, And yet again recovered ! From “ The Excurfion,” Book IV. THE: IDLE SHEPHERD-BOYS;: OF. DUNGEON- ~ GHEE HOKCE, A PASTORAL, The valley rings with mirth and joy ; Among the hills the echoes play A never, never-ending fong To welcome in the May : EON-GHYLL. ‘ I DUN( p. 40. oY’ THE IDLE SHEPHERD-BOYS., 41 The magpie chatters with delight ; ‘The mountain-raven’s youngling brood Have left the mother and the neft ; And they go rambling eaft and weft In fearch of their own food ; Or through the glittering vapours dart In very wantonnefs of heart. Beneath a rock, upon the grafs, Two boys are fitting in the fun ; It feems they have no work to do, Or that their work is done. On pipes of fycamore they play The fragments of a Chriftmas hymn ; Or with that plant which in our dale We call ftag-horn or fox’s tail, Their rufty hats they trim : And thus, as happy as the day, Thofe fhepherds wear the time away. Along the river’s ftony marge The fand-lark chants a joyous fong ; The thrufh is bufy in the wood, And carols loud and ftrong. A thoufand lambs are on the rocks, All newly-born ! both earth and fky Keep jubilee ; and more than all, G 42 LANGDALE. Thofe boys with their green coronal ; They never hear the cry, That plaintive cry! which up the hill Comes from the depth of Dungeon-Ghyll. Said Walter, leaping from the ground, * Down to the ftump of yon old yew We'll for our whiftles run a race.” Away the fhepherds flew. They leapt—they ran—and when they came Right oppofite to Dungeon-Ghyll, Seeing that he fhould lofe the prize, “Stop!” to his comrade Walter cries— James ftopped with no good will: Said Walter then, ** Your tafk is here, Twill keep you working half a year. *¢ Now crofs where I fhall crofs—come on, And follow me where I fhall lead.” — The other took him at his word, But did not like the deed. It was a {pot which you may fee If ever you to Langdale go : Into a chafm a mighty block Hath fallen, and made a bridge of rock: The gulf is deep below ; THE IDLE SHEPHERD-BOYS. 43 And in a bafin black and fmall Receives a lofty waterfall. With ftaff in hand, acrofs the cleft The challenger began his march ; And now, all eyes and feet, hath gained The middle of the arch. When lift! he hears a piteous moan— Again !—his heart within him dies— His pulfe is ftopped, his breath is loft, He totters, pale as any ghoft, And looking down, he {pies A lamb, that in the pool is pent Within that black and frightful rent. The lamb had flipped into the ftream, And fafe, without a bruife or wound, The cataract had borne him down Into the gulf profound. His dam had feen him when he fell, She faw him down the torrent borne ; And, while with all a mother’s love She from the lofty rocks above Sent forth a cry forlorn, The lamb, ftill fwimming round and round, Made anfwer to that plaintive found. 44 LANGDALE. When he had learnt what thing it was That fent this rueful cry ; I ween, The boy recovered heart, and told The fight which he had feen. Both gladly now deferred their tafk ; Nor was there wanting other aid,— A Poet, one who loves the brooks Far better than the fages’ books, By chance had thither ftrayed ; And there the helplefs lamb he found, By thofe huge rocks encompaffed round. He drew it gently from the pool, And brought it forth into the light : The fhepherds met him with his charge, An unexpected fight ! Into their arms the lamb they took, Said they, ‘‘ He’s neither maimed nor fcarred.”’ Then up the fteep afcent they hied, And placed him at his mother’s fide ; And gently did the Bard Thofe idle fhepherd-boys upbraid, And bade them better mind their trade. The Rotha. ae Sinise TO JOANNA. Your time of early youth ; and there you learned, yy From years of quiet induftry, to love /y IX ’ The living beings by your own fire-fide, ye With fuch a ftrong devotion, that your heart age Is flow towards the fympathies of them (} Who look upon the hills with tendernefs, 4 And make dear friendfhips with the ftreams and groves. Yet we, who are tranfgreffors in this kind, Dwelling retired in our fimplicity Among the woods and fields, we love you well, Joanna! and I guefs, fince you have been So diftant from us now for two long years, That you will gladly liften to difcourfe, 0 D \ 46 THE ROTHA. However trivial, if you thence are taught That they, with whom you once were happy, talk Familiarly of you and of old times. While I was feated, now fome ten days paft, Beneath thofe lofty firs that overtop Their ancient neighbour, the old fteeple-tower, The Vicar from his gloomy houfe hard by Came forth to greet me; and when he had afked, ‘¢ How fares Joanna, that wild-hearted maid ! And when will fhe return to us?” he paufed ; And, after fhort exchange of village news, He with grave looks demanded, for what caufe, Reviving obfolete idolatry, I, like a Runic prieft, in characters Of formidable fize had chifelled out Some uncouth name upon the native rock, Above the Rotha, by the foreft fide. ——Now, by thofe dear immunities of heart Engendered betwixt malice and true love, I was not loth to be fo catechifed, And this was my reply :—‘* As it befel, One Summer morning we had walked abroad At break of day, Joanna and myfelf. —’ Twas that delightful feafon when the broom, Full-flowered, and vifible on every fteep, Along the copfes runs in veins of gold. VIEW ON THE ROTHA. p. 46. TO JOANNA. 47 Our pathway led us on to Rotha’s banks ; And when we came in front of that tall rock Which looks towards the eaft, I there {topped fhort, And traced the lofty barrier with my eye From bafe to fummit ; fuch delight I found To note in fhrub and tree, in ftone and flower, That intermixture of delicious hues, Along fo vaft a furface, all at once, In one impreffion, by connecting force Of their own beauty, imaged in the heart. —When I had gazed perhaps two minutes’ fpace, Joanna, looking in my eyes, beheld That ravifhment of mine, and laughed aloud. The rock, like fomething ftarting from a fleep, Took up the lady’s voice, and laughed again: ‘That ancient woman feated on Helm-Crag Was ready with her cavern: Hammar-Scar, And the tall fteep of Silver-How, fent forth A noife of laughter ; fouthern Loughrigg heard, And Fairfield anfwered with a mountain tone: Helvellyn far into the clear blue fky Carried the lady’s voice—old Skiddaw blew His fpeaking trumpet :—back out of the clouds Of Glaramara fouthward came thie voice ; And Kirkftone toffed it from his mifty head. —Now whether (faid I to our cordial friend, Who in the hey-day of aftonifhment THE ROTHA, Smiled in my face) this were in fimple truth A work accomplifhed by the brotherhood Of ancient mountains, or my ear was touched _ With dreams and vifionary impulfes, Is not for me to tell; but fure 1 am That there was a loud uproar in the hills : And, while we both were liftening, to my fide The fair Joanna drew, as if fhe wifhed To fhelter from fome object of her fear. —And hence, long afterwards, when eighteen moons Were watted, as I chanced to walk alone Beneath this rock, at funrife, on a calm And filent morning, I fat down, and there, In memory of afteCtions old and true, I chifelled out in thofe rude characters Joanna’s name upon the living ftone. And I, and all who dwell by my fire-fide, Have called the lovely rock, Joanna’s Rock.” Rydale. ALA EMMA'S DELI? _ IT was an April morning: frefh and clear, ~ The rivulet delighting in its ftrength, Ran with a young man’s {peed ; and yet the voice “ys; Of waters which the Winter had fupplied, ; Nid Was foftened down into a vernal tone. The fpirit of enjoyment and defire, And hopes and wifhes, from all living things Went circling, like a multitude of founds. The budding groves appeared as if in hafte To fpur the fteps of June ; as if their fhades Of various green were hindrances that ftood Between them and their objeét : yet, meanwhile, There was fuch deep contentment in the air, That every naked afh, and tardy tree Yet leaflefs, feemed as though the countenance H 590 RYDALE. With which it looked on this delightful day Were native to the Summer.—Up the brook » I roamed in the confufion of my heart, Alive to all things and forgetting all. At length I to a fudden turning came eee In this continuous glen, where down a rock The ftream, fo ardent in its courfe before, Sent forth fuch fallies of glad found, that all Which I till then had heard, appeared the voice Of common pleafure: beaft and bird, the lamb, The fhepherd’s dog, the linnet and the thrufh, Vied with this waterfall, and made a fong Which, while I liftened, feemed like the wild se fo Or like fome natural produce of the air, | That could not ceafe to be. Green leaves were here ; But ’twas the foliage of the rocks, the birch, The yew, the holly, and the bright green thorn, With hanging iflands of refplendent furze : And on a fummit, diftant a fhort fpace, By any who fhould look beyond the dell, A fingle mountain-cottage might be feen. | I gazed, and gazed, and to myfelf I faid, ‘* Our thoughts at leaft are ours; and this wild nook, My Emma, I will dedicate to thee.” Soon did the fpot become my other home, My dwelling, and my out-of-doors abode. And of the fhepherds who have feen me there, RYDALE FALLS. Po 50s {f- eh ee WORDSWORTH’S HILL. To whom I fometimes in our idle talk Have told this fancy, two or three, perhaps, Years after we are gone and in our graves, When they have caufe to fpeak of this wild place, May call it by the name of Emma’s De tt. WORDSWORTA’S HILL. There is an eminence,—of thefe our hills The laft that parleys with the fetting fun ; We can behold it from our orchard-feat ; And, when at evening we purfue our walk Along the public way, this cliff, fo high Above us, and fo diftant in its height, Is vifible ; and often feems to fend Its own deep quiet to reftore our hearts. The meteors make of it a favourite haunt : The ftar of Jove, fo beautiful and large In the mid heavens, is never half fo fair As when he fhines above it. ’Tis in truth The lonelieft place we have among the clouds. And fhe who dwells with me, whom I have loved With fuch communion, that no place on earth Can ever be a folitude to me, Hath to this lonely fummit given my Name. §2 RYDALE. ee wos! eee ae oe ee ee ey ee ee MARY WORDSWORTH’S NOOK. a, TO LM, HH. Our walk was far among the ancient trees ; There was no road, nor any woodman’s path ; But the thick umbrage,—checking the wild growth Of weed and fapling, on the foft green turf Beneath the branches,—of itfelf had made A track, which brought us to a flip of lawn, And a {mall bed of water in the woods. All round this pool both flocks and herds might drink On its firm margin, even as from a well, Or fome ftone bafin which the herdfman’s hand Had fhaped for their refrefhment ; nor did fun, Or wind from any quarter, ever come, But as a bleffing, to this calm recefs, This glade of water, and this one green field. The {pot was made by Nature for herfelf, The travellers know it not, and ’twill remain Unknown to them: but it is beautiful ; And if a man fhould plant his cottage near, Should fleep beneath the fhelter of its trees, And blend its waters with his daily meal, WRITTEN WITH A SLATE-PENCIL, ETC. 53 He would fo love it, that in his death-hour Its image would furvive among his thoughts : And therefore, my fweet Mary, this ftill nook, With all its beeches, we have named from you. WRITTEN WITH A SLATE-PENCIL Upon a Stone, the largeft of a Heap lying near a Deyerted Quarry, upon one of the Iflands at Rydale. Stranger! this hillock of misfhapen ftones Is not a Ruin of the ancient time, Nor, as perchance thou rafhly deem’{t, the Cairn Of fome old Britifh chief: ’tis noching more Than the rude embryo of a little dome Or pleafure-houfe, once deftined to be built Among the birch-trees of this rocky ifle. But, as it chanced, Sir William having learned ‘That from the fhore a full-grown man might wade, And make himfelf a freeman of this fpot At any hour he chofe, the knight forthwith Defifted, and the quarry and the mound Are monuments of. his unfinifhed tafk.—— 34 RYDALE, The block on which thefe lines are traced, perhaps, Was once felected as the corner-{tone Of the intended pile, which would have been Some quaint odd play-thing of elaborate {kill, So that, I guefs, the linnet and the thrufh, And other little builders who dwell here, Had wondered at the work. But blame him not, For old Sir William was a gentle knight Bred in this vale, to which he appertained With all his anceftry. ‘Then peace to him, And for the outrage which he had devifed Entire forgivenefs !——But if thou art one On fire with thy impatience to become An inmate of thefe mountains,—if, difturbed By beautiful conceptions, thou haft hewn Out of the quiet rock the elements Of thy trim manfion deftined foon to blaze In fnow-white fplendour,—think again, and, taught By old Sir William and his quarry, leave ‘Thy fragments to the bramble and the rofe ; There let the vernal flow-worm fun himfelf, And let the red-breaft hop from ftone to ftone. RYDALE WATER, AND NAB SCAR. Pp. 54: TO MY SISTER, 55 HO Me sia) ER. Written at a fmall diftance from my Houfe, and fent by my little Boy. It is.the firft mild day of March : Each minute fweeter than before, The red-breaft fings from the tall larch That ftands befide our door. There is a bleffing in the air, Which feems a fenfe of joy to yield To the bare trees, and mountains bare, And grafs in the green field. My Sifter! (’tis a wifh of mine) Now that our morning meal is done, Make hafte, your morning tafk refign ; Come forth and feel the fun. RYDALE. Edward will come with you; and pray, Put on with fpeed your woodland drefs ; And bring no book: for this one day We'll give to idlenefs. No joylefs forms fhall regulate Our living calendar : We from to-day, my friend, will date The opening of the year. Love, now an univerfal birth, From heart to heart is ftealing, From earth to man, from man to earth: —lIt is the hour of feeling. One moment now may give us more Than fifty years of reafon : Our minds fhall drink at every pore The fpirit of the feafon. | Some filent laws our hearts may make, Which they fhall long obey : We for the year to come may take Our temper fro- to-day. TO MY SISTER. And from the bleffed power that rolls About, below, above, We'll frame the meafure of our fouls : ‘They fhall be tuned to love. Then come, my Sifter! come, I pray, With fpeed put on your woodland drefs ; And bring no book: for this one day We’ll give to idlenefs. ct J = NOW PRES | 57 Gra{mere. ergo ON APPROACHING HOME AFTER A TOUR IN SCOTLAND, 1803. LY, fome kind fpirit, fly to Grafmere Vale ! Say that we come, and come by this day’s light: Glad tidings !—fpread them over field and height ; But chiefly let one cottage hear the tale ; 7 There let a myftery of joy prevail, The kitten frolic with unruly might, » And Rover whine, as at a fecond fight Of near-approaching good that fhall not fail ;— And from that infant’s face let joy appear ; Yea, let our Mary’s one companion child, That hath her fix weeks’ folitude beguiled — With intimations manifold and dear, While we have wandered over wood and wild, Smile on his Mother now with bolder cheer. WALK BY THE LAKE. 59 A WALK BY THE LAKE. A narrow girdle of rough ftones and crags, A rude and natural caufeway interpofed Between the water and a winding flope Of copfe and thicket, leaves the eaftern fhore Of Grafmere fafe in its own privacy. And there, myfelf and two beloved Friends, One calm September morning, ere the mift Had altogether yielded to the fun, Sauntered on this retired and difficult way. ——T]]l fuits the road with one in hafte, but we Played with our time; and, as we ftrolled along, It was our occupation to obferve Such objects as the waves had toffed afhore, Feather, or leaf, or weed, or withered bough, Each on the other heaped, along the line Of the dry wreck. And, in our vacant mood, Not feldom did we ftop to watch fome tuft Of dandelion feed or thiftle’s beard, That fkimmed the furface of the dead calm lake, Suddenly halting now—a lifelefs ftand ! And ftarting off again with freak as fudden ; In all its fportive wanderings, all the while, Making report of an invifible breeze, 60 GRASMERE. That was its wings, its chariot, and its horfe, . Its very playmate, and its moving foul. ——And often, trifling with a privilege Alike indulged to all, we paufed, one now, And now the other, to point out, perchance To pluck, fome flower or water-weed, too fair Either to be divided from the place On which it grew, or to be left alone To its own beauty. Many fuch there are, Fair ferns and flowers, and chiefly that tall fern So ftately, of the Queen Ofmunda named, Plant lovetier in its own retired abode On Grafmere’s beach, than Naiad by the fide Of Grecian brook, or Lady of the Mere, ‘ Sole-fitting by the fhores of old Romance. —So fared we that {weet morning: from the fields Meanwhile a noife was heard, the bufy mirth Of reapers, men and women, boys and girls. Delighted much to liften to thofe founds, And, in the fafhion which I have defcribed, Feeding unthinking fancies, we advanced Along the indented fhore ; when fuddenly, Through a thin veil of glittering haze, we faw Before us, on a point of jutting land, The tall and upright figure of a man Attired in peafant’s garb, who ftood alone, Angling befide the margin of the lake. WALK: BY THE LAKE. That way we turned our fteps ; nor was it long Ere, making ready comments on the fight Which then we faw, with one and the fame voice Did all cry out, that he muft be indeed An idler, he who thus could lofe a day Of the mid-harveft, when the labourer’s hire Is ample, and fome little might be ftored Wherewith to cheer him in the winter-time. ‘Thus talking of that peafant, we approached _ Clofe to the fpot where with his rod and line He ftood alone ; whereat he turned his head To greet us—and we faw a man worn down By ficknefs, gaunt and lean, with funken cheeks And watted limbs, his legs fo long and lean, That for my fingle felf I looked at them, Forgetful of the body they fuftained.— Too weak to labour in the harvetft field, The man was ufing his beft {kill to gain A pittance from the dead unfeeling lake That knew not of his wants. I will not fay What thoughts immediately were ours, nor how The happy idlenefs of that {weet morn, With all its lovely images, was changed To ferious mufing and to felf-reproach. Nor did we fail to fee within ourfelves What need there is to be referved in {peech, And temper all our thoughts with charity. 62 GRASMERE, — Therefore, unwilling to forget that day, My friend, myfelf, and fhe who then received The fame admonifhment, have called the place By a memorial name, uncouth indeed As e’er by mariner was given to bay Or foreland, on a new-difcovered coatt ; And Point RasH JUDGMENT is the name it bears. HELM CRAG. The road is black before his eyes, Glimmering faintly where it lies; Black is the fky—and every hill, Up to the fky, is blacker ftill— Sky, hill, and dale, one difmal room, Hung round and overhung with gloom ; Save that above a fingle height Is to be feen a lurid light, Above Helm Crag—a ftreak half dead, A burning of portentous red ; And near that lurid light, full well The Aftrologer, fage Sidrophel, Where at his defk and book he fits, Puzzling aloft his curious wits ; He whofe domain is held in common With no one but the ANciENT Woman, GRASMERE, FROM RED BANK, p- 63. WRITTEN WITH A PENCIL, ETC. 63 Cowering befide her rifted cell, As if intent on magic f{pell ;— Dread pair, that fpite of wind and weather, Still fit upon Helm Crag together ! From ** The Waggoner,” Canto I. BRITTEN WITH: A: PENCIL Upon a Stone in the Wall of the Houfe (an as on the Ifland at Grafmere. Rude is this edifice, and thou haft feen Buildings, albeit rude, that have maintained Proportions more harmonious, and approached To fomewhat of a clofer fellowfhip With the ideal grace. Yet, as it is, Do take it in good part :—alas, the poor Vitruvius of our village had no help From the great city ; never, on the leaves Of red morocco folio, faw difplayed The fkeletons and pre-exifting ghosts Of beauties yet unborn,—the ruftic box, Snug cot, with coach-houfe, fhed, and hermitage. Thou feeft a homely pile, yet to thefe walls The heifer comes in the fnow-{ftorm, and here 64 GRASMERE. The new-dropped lamb finds fhelter from the wind. And hither does one Poet fometimes row His pinnace, a fmall vagrant barge, up-piled With plenteous ftore of heath and withered fern (A lading which he with his fickle cuts Among the mountains), and beneath this roof He makes his Summer couch, and here at noon Spreads out his limbs, while, yet unfhorn, the fheep, Panting beneath the burden of their wool, Lie round him, even as if they were a part Of his own houfehold; nor, while from his bed, He through that door-place looks towards the lake And to the ftirring breezes, does he want Creations lovely as the work of fleep, Fair fights and vifions of romantic joy! MICHAEL. A PASTORAL POEM. If from the public way you turn your fteps Up the tumultuous brook of Greenhead Ghyll, You will fuppofe that with an upright path Your feet muft ftruggle ; in fuch bold afcent The paftoral mountains front you, face to face. But, courage! for around that boifterous brook MICHAEL. 65 ‘The mountains have all opened out themfelves, And made a hidden valley of their own. No habitation there is feen; but fuch As journey thither find themfelves alone With a few fheep, with rocks and ftones, and kites That overhead are failing in the fky. It is, in truth, an utter folitude ;_ Nor fhould I have made mention of this dell, But for one object which you might pafs by, Might fee and notice not. Befide the brook There is a ftraggling heap of unhewn ftones ; And to that place a ftory appertains, Which, though it be ungarnifhed with events, Is not unfit, I deem, for the fire-fide, Or for the Summer fhade. It was the firft, The earlieft of thofe tales that fpake to me Of fhepherds, dwellers in the valleys, men Whom I already loved ;—not verily For their own fakes, but for the fields and hills Where was their occupation and abode. And hence this tale—while I was yet a boy Carelefs of books, yet having felt the power Of Nature,—by the gentle agency Of natural objects, led me on to feel For paffions that were not my own, and think (At random, and imperfectly indeed) On man, the heart of man, and human life. K 66 GRASMERE. Therefore, although it be a hiftory Homely and rude, I will relate the fame For the delight of a few natural hearts ; And, with yet fonder feeling, for the fake Of youthful poets, who among thefe hills Will be my fecond felf when I am gone. Upon the foreft-fide in Grafmere Vale There dwelt a fhepherd, Michael was his name ; An old man, ftout of heart, and {trong of limb. His bodily frame had been from youth to age Of an unufual ftrength: his mind was keen, Intenfe and frugal, apt for all affairs, And in his fhepherd’s calling he was prompt And watchful more than ordinary men. Hence he had learned the meaning of all winds, Of blafts of every tone; and, oftentimes, When others heeded not, he heard the fouth Make fubterraneous mufic, like the noife Of bagpipers on diftant Highland hills, The fhepherd, at fuch warning, of his flock Bethought him, and he to himfelf would fay, “¢ The winds are now devifing work for me!” And, truly, at all times, the ftorm, that drives The traveller to a fhelter, fummoned him Up to the mountains: he had been alone Amid the heart of many thoufand mifts, Nic" * SE no MICHAEL. 67 That came to him and left him on the heights. So lived he till his eightieth year was patt ; And groffly that man errs, who fhould fuppofe ‘That the green valleys, and the ftreams and rocks, Were things indifferent to the fhepherd’s thoughts. Fields, where with cheerful fpirits he had breathed The common air; the hills, which he fo oft Had climbed with vigorous fteps ; which had imprefled So many incidents upon his mind Of hardfhip, fkill, or courage, joy or fear ; Which, like a book, preferved the memory Of the dumb animals whom he had faved, Had fed or fheltered, linking to fuch acts, So grateful in themfelves, the certainty Of honourable gain; thefe fields, thefe hills, Which were his living being, even more Than his own blood—what could they lefs ? had laid Strong hold on his affections, were to him A pleafurable feeling of blind love, The pleafure which there is in life itfelf. His days had not been paffed in finglenefs. His helpmate was a comely matron, old— Though younger than himfelf full twenty years. She was a woman of a ftirring life, Whofe heart was in her houfe : two wheels fhe had Of antique form ; this large, for {pinning wool ; 68 GRASMERE. That fmall, for flax; and if one wheel had reft, It was becaufe the other was at work. The pair had but one inmate in their houfe, An only child, who had been born to them When Michael, telling o’er his years, began To deem that he was old,—in fhepherd’s phrafe, With one foot in the grave. ‘This only fon, With two brave fheep-dogs tried in many a ftorm, The one of an ineftimable worth, Made all their houfehold. I may truly fay, That they were as a proverb in the vale For endlefs induftry. When day was gone, And from their occupations out of doors The fon and father were come home, even then Their labour did not ceafe ; unlefs when all : Turned to the cleanly fupper-board, and there, Each with a mefs of pottage and fkimmed milk, Sat round their bafket piled with oaten cakes, And their plain home-made cheefe. Yet when their meal Was ended, Luke (for fo the fon was named) And his old father both betook themfelves To fuch convenient work as might employ Their hands by the fire-fide ; perhaps to card Wool for the houfewife’s fpindle, or repair Some injury done to fickle, flail, or fcythe, Or other implement of houfe or field. MICHAEL. 69 Down from the ceiling, by the chimney’s edge, Which in our ancient uncouth country ftyle Did with a huge projection overbrow Large fpace beneath, as duly as the light Of day grew dim, the houfewife hung a lamp ; An aged utenfil, which had performed Service beyond all others of its kind. Early at evening did it burn, and late, Surviving comrade of uncounted hours, Which going by from year to year had found And left the couple neither gay perhaps Nor cheerful, yet with objects and with hopes, Living a life of eager induftry. And now, when Luke was in his eighteenth year, There by the light of this old lamp they fat, Father and fon, while late into the night The houfewife plied her own peculiar work, Making the cottage through the filent hours Murmur as with the found of fummer flies. This light was famous in its neighbourhood, And was a public fymbol of the life The thrifty pair had lived. For, as it chanced, Their cottage on a plot of rifing ground Stood fingle, with large profpect, north and fouth, High into Eafedale, up to Dunmail-Raife, And weftward to the village near the lake ; And from this conftant light, fo regular GRASMERE. And fo far feen, the houfe itfelf, by all Who dwelt within the limits of the vale, Both old and young, was named the EVENING STAR. Thus living on through fuch a length of years, The fhepherd, if he loved himfelf, muft needs Have loved his helpmate ; but to Michael’s heart This fon of his old age was yet more dear— Effect which might perhaps have been produced By that inftinctive tendernefs, the fame Blind fpirit, which is in the blood of all— Or that a child, more than all other gifts, Brings hope with it, and forward-looking thoughts, And ftirrings of inquietude, when they By tendency of nature needs mutt fail. From fuch and other caufes, to the thoughts Of the old man his only fon was now The deareft obje& that he knew on earth. Exceeding was the love he bare to him, His heart and his heart’s joy! For oftentimes Old Michael, while he was a babe in arms, Had done him female fervice, not alone For dalliance and delight, as is the ufe Of fathers, but with patient mind enforced To acts of tendernefs; and he had rocked His cradle with a woman’s gentle hand. MICHAEL, And, in a later time, ere yet the boy Had put on boy’s attire, did Michael love, Albeit of a ftern unbending mind, To have the young one in his fight, when he Had work by his own door, or when he fat, With fheep before him, on his fhepherd’s ftool, Beneath that large old oak, which near their door Stood,—and, from its enormous breadth of fhade, Chofen for the fhearer’s covert from the fun, Thence in our rutftic dialect was called The Criippinc TREE, a name which yet it bears. There, while they two were fitting in the fhade, With others round them, earneft all and blithe, Would Michael exercife his heart with looks Of fond correction and reproof beftowed Upon the child, if he difturbed the fheep By catching at their legs, or with his fhouts Scared them, while they lay ftill beneath the fhears. And when by Heaven’s good grace the boy grew up A healthy lad, and carried in his cheek Two fteady rofes that were five years old, ‘Then Michael from a winter coppice cut With his own hand a fapling, which he hooped With iron, making it throughout in all Due requifites a perfect fhepherd’s ftaff, 71 GRASMERE. And gave it to the boy ; wherewith equipt He as a watchman oftentimes was placed At gate or gap, to ftem or turn the flock ; And, to his office prematurely called, There ftood the urchin, as you will divine, Something between a hindrance and a help ; And for this caufe, not always, I believe, Receiving from his father hire of praife ; Though nought was left undone which ftaff, or voice, Or looks, or threatening geftures, could perform. But foon as Luke, full ten years old, could ftand Against the mountain blafts; and to the heights, Not fearing toil, nor length of weary ways, He with his father daily went, and they Were as companions, why fhould I relate That objects which the fhepherd loved before Were dearer now? that from the boy there came Feelings and emanations—things which were Light to the fun and mufic to the wind; And that the old man’s heart feemed born again ? Thus in his father’s fight the boy grew up; And now, when he had reached his eighteenth year, He was his comfort and his daily hope. While in this fort the fimple houfehold lived From day to day, to Michael’s ear there came MICHAEL. Diftrefsful tidings. Long before the time Of which I fpeak, the fhepherd had been bound In furety for his brother’s fon, a man Of an induftrious life, and ample means,— But unforefeen misfortunes fuddenly Had preffed upon him,—and old Michael now Was fummoned to difcharge the forfeiture, A grievous penalty, but little lefs ‘Than half his fubftance. ‘This unlooked-for claim, At the firft hearing, for a moment took More hope out of his life than he fuppofed That any old man ever could have loft. As foon as he had gathered fo much ftrength That he could look his trouble in the face, It feemed that his fole refuge was to fell A portion of his patrimonial fields. Such was his firft refolve; he thought again, And his heart failed him. ‘ Ifabel,” faid he, ‘Two evenings after he had heard the news, <¢T have been toiling more than feventy years, And in the open funfhine of God’s love Have we all lived; yet if thefe fields of ours Should pafs into a ftranger’s hand, I think That I could not lie quiet in my grave. Our lot is a hard lot ; the fun himfelf Has fcarcely been more diligent than I, And I have lived to be a fool at laft L 74 GRASMERE, ‘To my own family. An evil man ~ ‘That was, and made an evil choice, if he Were falfe to us ; and, if he were not falfe, There are ten thoufand to whom lofs like this Had been no forrow. I forgive him ;—but *T were better to be dumb than to talk thus. “When | began, my purpofe was to {peak Of remedies and of a cheerful hope. Our Luke fhall leave us, Ifabel; the land Shall not go from us, and it fhall be free; He fhall poffefs it, free as is the wind That pafles over it. We have, thou know’ft, Another kinfman—he will be our friend In this diftress. He is a profperous man, ‘Thriving in trade—and Luke to him fhall go, And with his kinfman’s help and his own thrift, He quickly will repair this lofs, and then May come again to us. If here he ftay, What can be done? Where every one is poor What can be gained?”’ At this the old man paufed, And Ifabel fat filent, for her mind 7 Was bufy, looking back into paft times. There’s Richard Bateman, thought fhe to herfelf, He was a parifh-boy—at the church-door They made a gathering for him, fhillings, pence, And half-pennies, wherewith the neighbours bought MICHAEL. 75 A bafket, which they filled with pedlar’s wares ; And, with this bafket on his arm, the lad Went up to London, found a matter there, Who out of many chofe the trufty boy To go and overlook his merchandize Beyond the feas ; where he grew wondrous rich, And left eftates and moneys to the poor, And at his birth-place built a chapel floored With marble, which he fent from foreign lands. Thefe thoughts, and many others of like fort, Paffed quickly through the mind of Ifabel, And her face brightened. ‘The old man was glad, And thus refumed :—‘* Well, Ifabel! this fcheme ‘Thefe two days has been meat and drink to me. Far more than we have loft is left us yet. —We have enough—I with, indeed, that I Were younger ;—but this hope is a good hope. —Make ready Luke’s beft garments, of the beft Buy for him more, and let us fend him forth ‘To-morrow, or the next day, or to-night: —If he could go, the boy fhould go to-night.” Here Michael ceafed, and to the fields went forth With a light heart. The houfewife for five days Was reftlefs morn and night, and all day long Wrought on with her beft fingers to prepare Things needful for the journey of her fon. 76 GRASMERE. But Ifabel was glad when Sunday came To ftop her in her work: for, when fhe lay By Michael’s fide, fhe through the two laft nights Heard him, how he was troubled in his fleep : And when they rofe at morning fhe could fee That all his hopes were gone. ‘That day at noon She faid to Luke, while they two by themfelves Were fitting at the door, “* Thou muft not go: We have no other child but thee to lofe, None to remember—do not go away, For if thou leave thy father he will die.” The youth made anfwer with a jocund voice ; And Ifabel, when fhe had told her fears, Recovered heart. ‘That evening her beft fare Did fhe bring forth, and all together fat Like happy people round a Chriftmas fire. Next morning [abel refumed her work ; And all the enfuing week the houfe appeared As cheerful as a grove in Spring: at length The expected letter from their kinfman came, With kind affurances that he would do His utmoft for the welfare of the boy ; To which requefts were added that forthwith He might be fent to him. ‘Ten times or more The letter was read over; Ifabel Went forth to fhow it to the neighbours round ; MICHAEL. Nor was there at that time on Englifh land A prouder heart than Luke’s. When Ifabel Had to her houfe returned, the old man faid, - “ He fhall depart to-morrow.” ‘To this word The houfewife anfwered, talking much of things Which, if at fuch fhort notice he fhould go, Would furely be forgotten. But at length She gave confent, and Michael was at eafe. Near the tumultuous brook of Greenhead Ghyll, In that deep valley, Michael had defigned To build a fheepfold ; and, before he heard The tidings of his melancholy lofs, For this fame purpofe he had gathered up A heap of ftones, which by the ftreamlet’s edge Lay thrown together, ready for the work. With Luke that evening thitherward he walked ; And foon as they had reached the place, he ftopped, And thus the old man fpake to him :—** My fon, ‘To-morrow thou wilt leave me: with full heart I look upon thee, for thou art the fame That wert a promife to me ere thy birth, And all thy life haft been my da'ly joy. I will relate to thee fome little part Of our two hiftories ; ’t will do thee good When thou art from me, even if I fhould fpeak Of things thou canft not know of.—— After thou 77 78 GRASMERE. Firft cam’ft into the world—as oft befals To new-born infants—thou didft fleep away Two days, and bleffings from thy father’s tongue Then fell upon thee. Day by day pafled on, And ftill I loved thee with increafing love. Never to living ear came fweeter founds | Than when I heard thee by our own firefide Firft uttering, without words, a natural tune ; When thou, a feeding babe, didft in thy joy Sing at thy mother’s breaft. Month followed month, And in the open fields my life was paffed, And on the mountains, elfe I think that thou Hadft been brought up upon thy father’s knees. But we were playmates, Luke : among thefe hills, As well thou know’ft, in us the old and young Have played together, nor with me didft thou Lack any pleafure which a boy can know.” Luke had a manly heart: but at thefe words He fobbed aloud. ‘The old man grafped his hand, And faid, ** Nay, do not take it fo—I fee That thefe are things of which I need not fpeak. —FEven to the utmoft I have been to thee A kind and a good father: and herein I but repay a gift which I myfelf Received at other’s hands; for, though now old Beyond the common life of man, I ftill Remember them who loved me in my youth. MICHAEL, Both of them fleep together: here they lived, As all their forefathers had done ; and when At length their time was come, they were not loth To give their bodies to the family mould. I wifhed that thou fhouldft live the life they lived. But ’tis a long time to look back, my fon, And fee fo little gain from fixty years. Thefe fields were burthened when they came to me ; Till I was forty years of age, not more Than half of my inheritance was mine. I toiled and toiled ; God bleffed me in my work, And till thefe three weeks paft the land was free. —It looks as if it never could endure Another mafter. Heaven forgive me, Luke, If I judge ill for thee, but it feems good That thou fhouldft go.” At this the old man paufed; Then pointing to the {tones near which they ftood, Thus, after a fhort filence, he refumed: “This was a work for us; and now, my fon, It is a work for me. But, lay one ftone— Here, lay it for me, Luke, with thine own hands. Nay, boy, be of good hope ;—we both may live To fee a better day. At eighty-four I ftill am {trong and ftout ;—do thou thy part, ‘I will do mine.—I will begin again 79 80 GRASMERE, With many tafks that were refigned to thee ; Up to the heights, and in among the ftorms, Will I without thee go again, and do All works which I was wont to do alone, Before I knew thy face.—Heaven blefs thee, boy ! Thy heart thefe two weeks has been beating faft With many hopes; it fhould be fo—yes—yes— I knew that thou couldft never have a with To leave me, Luke: thou haft been bound to me Only by links of love: when thou art gone, What will be left to us !— But, I forget My purpofes. Lay now the corner-ftone, As I requefted ; and hereafter, Luke, When thou art gone away, fhould evil men Be thy companions, think of me, my fon, And of this moment; hither turn thy thoughts, And God will ftrengthen thee: amid all fear And all temptation, Luke, I pray that thou Mayft bear in mind the life thy fathers lived, Who, being innocent, did for that caufe Beftir them in good deeds. Now, fare thee well— When thou return’{t, thou in this place wilt fee A work which is not here: a covenant Tl’ will be between us——But, whatever fate Befal thee, I fhall love thee to the laft, And bear thy memory with me to the grave.” Bo a: ae a MICHAEL. 81 The fhepherd ended here: and Luke ftooped down, And as his father had requetted, laid The firft ftone of the fheepfold. At the fight The old man’s grief broke from him, to his heart He preffed his fon, he kifféd him and wept : And to the houfe together they returned. —Huthed was that houfe in peace, or feeming peace, Ere the night fell :—with morrow’s dawn the boy Began his journey, and when he had reached The public way, he put on a bold face; And all the neighbours, as he paffed their doors, Came forth with wifhes and with farewell prayers, That followed him till he was out of fight. A good report did from their kinfman come, Of Luke and his well-doing: and the boy Wrote loving letters, full of wondrous news, Which, as the houfewife phrafed it, were throughout _ “ The prettieft letters that were ever feen.” Both parents read them with rejoicing hearts. So, many months paffed on: and once again The fhepherd went about his daily work With confident and cheerful thoughts ; and now Sometimes when he could find a leifure hour, He to that valley took his way, and there Wrought at the fheepfold. Meantime Luke began To flacken in his duty ; and at length M 82 _ He in the diffolute city gave himfelf GRASMERE. To evil courfes : ignominy and fhame x : Li + re Fell on him, fo that he was driven at laft == To feek a hiding-place beyond the feas. There is a comfort in the ftrength of Jevears Twill make a thing endurable, which elie. Would break the heart :—old Michael found it ia I have converfed with more than one who well” Remembered the old man, and what he was Years after he had heard this heavy news. — ke His bodily frame had been from youth to age S : ie Of an unufual ftrength. Among the rocks parks He went, and ftill looked up upon the fun, ae ; And liftened to the wind ; and as before ae af Performed all kinds of labour for his fheep, mk ; And for the land, his fmall inheritance. And to that hollow dell from time to rims Did he repair, to build the fold of which His flock had need, ’Tis not forgotten yet ee, The pity which was then in every heart For the old man—and ’tis believed me all ‘ A FAREWELL, 83 Then old, befide him, lying at his feet. The length of full feven years, from time to time, He at the building of this fheepfold wrought, And left the work unfinifhed when he died. Three years, or little more, did Ifabel Survive her hufband : at her death the eftate Was fold, and went into a ftranger’s hand. The cottage which was named the EVENING STAR Is gone—the ploughfhare has been through the ground On which it ftood ; great changes have been wrought In all the neighbourhood :—yet the oak is left ‘That grew befide their door ; and the remains Of the unfinifhed fheepfold may be feen Befide the boifterous brook of Greenhead Ghyll. A FAREWELL. (Written when going to bring home his Bride.) Farewell, thou little nook of mountain-ground, Thou rocky corner in the loweft ftair Of that magnificent temple which doth bound One fide of our whole vale with grandeur rare ; Sweet garden-orchard, eminently fair, 84. GRASMERE. The lovelieft fpot that man hath ever found, Farewell !—We leave thee to Heaven’s peaceful care, Thee, and the cottage which thou doft furround. Our boat is fafely anchored by the fhore, And fafely fhe will ride when we are gone ; ‘The flowering fhrubs that decorate our door Will profper, though untended and alone: Fields, goods, and far-off chattels we have none ; Thefe narrow bounds contain our private ftore Of things earth makes, and fun doth fhine upon ; Here are they in our fight—we have no more. Sunfhine and fhower be with you, bud and bell ! For two months now in vain we fhall be fought : We leave you here in folitude to dwell With thefe our lateft gifts of tender thought ; Thou, like the morning, in thy faftron coat, Bright gowan, and marfh-marigold, farewell ! Whom from the borders of the lake we brought, And placed together near our rocky well. We go for one to whom you will be dear ; And fhe will prize this bower, this Indian fhed, Our own contrivance, building without peer ! —A gentle maid, whofe heart is lowly bred, Whofe pleafures are in wild fields gatheréd, A FAREWELL. With joyoufnefs, and with a thoughtful cheer, She Il come to you,—to you herfelf will wed,— And love the bleffed life which we lead here. Dear fpot ! which we have watched with tender heed, Bringing thee chofen plants and bloffoms blown Among the diftant mountains, flower and weed, Which thou haft taken to thee as thy own, Making all kindnefs regiftered and known ; Thou for our fakes, though Nature’s child indeed, Fair in thyfelf and beautiful alone, Haft taken gifts which thou doft little need. And O moft conftant, yet moft fickle place, Thou haft thy wayward moods, as thou doft fhow To them who look not daily on thy face ; Who, being loved, in love no bounds doft know, And fay’{t when we forfake thee, ‘‘ Let them go!” Thou eafy-hearted thing, with thy wild race Of weeds and flowers, till we return be flow,— And travel with the year at a foft pace. Help us to tell her tales of years gone by, And this fweet fpring, the beft beloved and bett ; Joy will be flown in its mortality ; Something muft ftay to tell us of the reft. Here, thronged with primrofes, the fteep rock’s breaft 86 GRASMERE. Glittered at evening like a ftarry fky ; And in this bufh our fparrow built her neft, Of which I fang one fong that will not die. O happy Garden! whofe feclufion deep Hath been fo friendly to induftrious hours ; And to foft flumbers, that did gently fteep Our {pirits, carrying with them dreams of flowers, And wild notes warbled among leafy bowers ! ‘Two burning months let Summer overleap, And, coming back with her who will be ours, Into thy bofom we again fhall creep. | Helvellyn. OLA FIDELITY. BARKING found the fhepherd hears, A cry as of a dog or fox ; He halts, and fearches with his eyes Among the fcattered rocks : ) And now at diftance can difcern A ftirring in a brake of fern ; And inftantly a dog is feen, Glancing from that covert green. The dog is not of mountain breed ; Its motions, too, are wild and fhy ; With fomething, as the fhepherd thinks, Unufual in its cry: 88 HELVELLYN. Nor is there any one in fight All round, in hollow or on height ; Nor fhout, nor whiftle ftrikes his ear ; What is the creature doing here? It was a cove, a huge recefs, That keeps, till June, December’s fnow ; A lofty precipice in front, A filent tarn below ! Far in the bofom of Helvellyn, Remote from public road or dwelling, Pathway, or cultivated land ; From trace of human foot or hand. There fometimes doth a leaping fifh Send through the tarn a lonely cheer ; The crags repeat the raven’s croak, In fymphony auttere ; Thither the rainbow comes—the cloud— And mifts that fpread the flying fhroud ; And funbeams ; and the founding blaft, That, if it could, would hurry paft, But that enormous barrier binds it faft. Not free from boding thoughts, a while The fhepherd ftood: then makes his way FIDELITY. Towards the dog, o’er rocks and ftones, As quickly as he may ; Nor far had gone, before he found A human fkeleton on the ground ; The appalled difcoverer, with a figh Looks round, to learn the hiftory. From thofe abrupt and perilous rocks The man had fallen, that place of fear ! At length upon the fhepherd’s mind It breaks, and all is clear: He inftantly recalled the name, And who he was, and whence he came ; Remembered, too, the very day On which the traveller paffed this way. But hear a wonder, for whofe fake, This lamentable tale I tell ! A lafting monument of words This wonder merits well. The dog, which ftill was hovering nigh, Repeating the fame timid cry, This dog had been through three months’ {pace A dweller in that favage place. Yes, proof was plain that fince the day On which the traveller thus had died, N 89 go “?°TIS SAID THAT SOME HAVE DIED FOR LOVE.” HELVELLYN. The dog had: watched about the fpot, Or by his matter’s fide ;_. How nourifhed here through fuch long time He knows, who gave that love fublime, And gave that ftrength of feeling, great Above all human eftimate. ’'Tis faid that fome have died for love: And here and there a churchyard grave is found In the cold North’s unhallowed ground,— Becaufe the wretched man himfelf had flain, His love was fuch a grievous pain. And there is one whom I five years have known ; He dwells alone Upon Helvellyn’s fide : He loved.—The pretty Barbara died, And thus he made his moan : Three years had Barbara in her grave been laid, When thus his moan he made :— “Oh, move, thou cottage, from behind that oak ! . Or let the aged tree uprooted lie, “©°’TIS SAID THAT SOME HAVE DIED FOR LOVE.” gI That in fome other way yon {moke May mount into the fky ! The clouds pafs on; they from the heavens depart. I look—the fky is empty fpace ; I know not what I trace ; But, when I ceafe to look, my hand is on my heart. ‘© O, what a weight is in thefe fhades! ye leaves, When will that dying murmur be fuppreff’d ? Your found my heart of peace bereaves, It robs my heart of reft. ‘Thou thrufh, that fingeft loud—and loud and free, Into yon row of willows flit, Upon that alder fit, Or fing another fong, or choofe another tree. *¢ Roll back, fweet rill! back to thy mountain bounds, And there for ever be thy waters chain’d! For thou doft haunt the air with founds That cannot be fuftain’d ; If {till beneath that pine-tree’s ragged bough Headlong yon waterfall muft come, Oh let it then be dumb !— Be anything, fweet rill, but that which thou art now. <¢ "Thou eglantine, whofe arch fo proudly towers (Even like a rainbow fpanning half the vale), Q2 HELVELLYN. Thou one fair fhrub—oh, fhed thy flowers, And ftir not in the gale! For thus to fee thee nodding in the air, — To fee thy arch thus ftretch and bend, _ Thus rife and thus defcend,— Difturbs me, till the fight is more than I can bear.’ The man who makes this feverifh complaint Is one of giant ftature, who could dance Equipp’d from head to foot in iron mail. Ah gentle love! if ever thought was thine To ftore up kindred hours for me, thy face Turn from me, gentle love! nor let me walk Within the found of Emma’s voice, or know Such happinefs as I have known to-day. > Derwent-water. SONNET TO SKIDDAW. ELION and Offa flourith fide by fide, ‘Together in immortal books enrolled : His ancient dower Olympus hath not fold ; And that infpiring hill, which “¢ did divide Into two ample horns his forehead wide,”’ Shines with poetic radiance as of old ; While not an Englifh mountain we behold By the celeftial mufes glorified. Yet round our fea-girt fhore they rife in crowds: What was the great Parnaflus’ felf to thee, Mount Skiddaw? In his natural fovereignty Our Britifh hill is fairer far: he fhrouds His double-fronted head in higher clouds, And pours forth ftreams more {weet than Caftaly. 0+ DERWENT-WATER. “THE CHILDLESS FATHER, ‘Up, Timothy, up, with your ftaff, and away ! Not a foul in the village this morning will ftay ; The hare has juft ftarted from Hamilton’s grounds, And Skiddaw is glad with the cry of the hounds.” —-Of coats and of jackets, grey, fcarlet, and green, On the flopes of the paftures all colours were feen; With their comely blue aprons, and caps white as fnow, The girls on the hills made a holiday fhow. The bafin of boxwood, juft fix months before, Had ftood on the table at Timothy’s door. A coffin through Timothy’s threfhold had pafi’d ; One child did it bear, and that child was his laft. Now faft up the dell came the noife and the fray, The horfe and the horn, and the *¢ hark! hark away !” Old Timothy took up his ftaff, and he fhut, With a leifurely motion, the door of his hut. DERWENT-WATER. Pp. 95. INSCRIPTION. 95 Perhaps to himfelf at that moment he faid, “The key I muft take, for my Helen is dead.” But of this in my ears not a word did he fpeak, And he went to the chafe with a tear on his cheek. INSCRIPTION For the Spot where the Hermitage Stood ON ST. HERBERT’S ISLAND, DERWENT-WATER. This ifland, guarded from profane approach By mountains high, and waters widely {pread, Is that recefs to which St. Herbert came In life’s decline: a felf-fecluded man, After long exercife in focial cares And offices humane, intent to adore The Deity, with undiftrated mind, And meditate on everlafting things. —Stranger! this fhapelefs heap of ftones and earth (Long be its mofly covering undifturbed ! ) Is reverenced as a veftige of the abode DERWENT-WATER. In which, through many feafons, from the world Removed, and the affections of the world, He dwelt in folitude.—But he had left A fellow-labourer, whom the good man loved As his own foul. And when within his cave Alone he knelt before the crucifix, While o’er the Lake the cataract of Lodore Pealed to his orifons, and when he paced Along the beach of this fmall ifle, and thought Of his companion, he would pray that both (Now that their earthly duties were fulfilled) Might die in the fame moment. Nor in vain So prayed he: as our chronicles report, Though here the Hermit numbered his laft day, Far from St. Cuthbert his beloved friend, Thofe holy men both died in the fame hour. Brougham Catftle. BLA SONG, AT THE FEAST OF -BROUGHAM CASTLE, Upon the reftoration of Lord Clifford, the Shepherd, to the E/ftates and Flonours of his Anceftors. : ee) ry ay rnre 3) : et Fy . a) Cy IGH in the breathlefs hall the minftrel fate, Fe 2! 4And Emont’s murmur mingled with the fong,— The words of ancient time I thus tranflate, A feftal ftrain that hath been filent long : — “‘ From town to town, from tower to tower, The red rofe is a gladfome flower. Her thirty years of winter patft, i The red rofe is revived at laft ; She lifts her head for endlefs fpring, For everlafting bloffoming : Both rofes flourifh, red and white ; In love and fifterly delight, fe) 98 BROUGHAM CASTLE, ‘The two that were at ftrife are blended, And all old troubles now are ended.— Joy ! joy to both! but moft to her Who is the flower of Lancafter! _ Behold her how fhe fmiles to-day On this great throng, this bright array ! Fair greeting doth fhe fend to all From every corner of the hall ; But, chiefly, from above the board Where fits in ftate our rightful lord, A Clifford to his own reftored ! ‘¢’They came with banner, fpear, and fhield, And it was proved in Bofworth-field. Not long the avenger was withftood — Earth helped him with the cry of blood ; St. George was for us, and the might Of blefled angels crowned the right. Loud voice the Jand hath uttered forth, We loudeft in the faithful North : Our fields rejoice, our mountains ring, Our ftreams proclaim a welcoming ; Our ftrong abodes and caftles fee The glory of their loyalty. How glad is Skipton at this hour— ‘Though fhe is but a lonely tower ! Silent, deferted of her beft, SONG, ETC. Without an inmate or a gueft, Knight, fquire, or yeoman, page or groom ; We have them at the feaft of Brough’m. How glad Pendragon—though the fleep Of years be on her!—She {hall reap A tafte of this great pleafure, viewing As in a dream her own renewing. Rejoiced is Brough, right glad I deem, Befide her little humble ftream ; And fhe that keepeth watch and ward, Her ftatelier Eden’s courfe to guard ; They both are happy at this hour, Though each is but a lonely tower :-— But here is perfect joy and pride For one fair houfe by Emont’s fide, This day diftinguifhed without peer ; To fee her mafter, and to cheer Him and his lady mother dear! “Oh! it was a time forlorn, When the fatherlefs was born— Give her wings that fhe may fly, Or fhe fees her infant die ! Swords that are with flaughter wild Hunt the mother and the child. Who will take them from the light? — Yonder is a man in fight— 100 BROUGHAM CASTLE. Yonder is a houfe—. but where ? No, they muft not enter there. To the caves, and to the brooks, To the clouds of heaven fhe looks ; She is fpeechlefs, but her eyes Pray in ghoftly agonies. Blifsful Mary, mother mild, Maid and mother undefiled, Save a mother and her child ! ‘< Now who is he that bourds with joy On Carrock’s fide, a fhepherd-boy ? No thoughts hath he but thoughts that pafs Light as the wind along the grafs. Can this be he who hither came In fecret like a fmothered flame? O’er whom fuch thankful tears were fhed For fhelter, and a poor man’s bread ! God loves the child ; and God hath willed That thofe dear words fhould be fulfilled, The lady’s words, when forced away, The laft fhe to her babe did fay, My own, my own, thy fellow-gueft I may not be; but reft thee, reft, For lowly fhepherd’s life is beft!’ — “¢ Alas! when evil men are ftrong, No life is good, no pleafure long. ULLESWATER, FROM GOWBARROW. D.. 101, SONG, ETC. IOI The boy muft part from Mofedale’s groves, And leave Blencathara’s rugged coves, And quit the flowers that Summer brings To Glenderamakin’s lofty fprings ; Muft vanifh, and his carelefs cheer Be turned to heavinefs and fear. —-Give Sir Lancelot Threlkeld praife ; Hear it, good man, old in days ! Thou tree of covert and of reft For this young bird that is diftreft ; Among thy branches fafe he lay, And he was free to fport and play When falcons were abroad for prey. “< A recreant harp, that fings of fear — And heavinefs in Clifford’s ear ! I faid, when evil men are ftrong, No life is good, no pleafure long, — A weak and cowardly untruth ! Our Clifford was a happy youth, And thankful through a weary time, That brought him up to manhood’s prime. —Again he wanders forth at will, And tends a flock from hill to hill : His garb. is humble; ne’er was feen Such garb with fuch a noble mien ; Among the fhepherd-grooms no mate 102 BROUGHAM CASTLE. Hath he, a child of ftrength and ftate ! Yet lacks not friends for folemn oe And a cheerful company, That learned of him fubmiffive ways, And comforted his private days. To his fide the fallow-deer Came, and refted without fear ; The eagle, lord of land and fea, Stooped down to pay him fealty ;— And both the undying fifh that fwim Through Bowfcale-Tarn did wait on him ; The pair were fervants of his eye In their immortality ; They moved about in open fight, To and fro, for his delight. He knew the rocks which angels haunt On the mountains vifitant ; He hath kenned them taking wing : And the caves where fairies fing He hath entered ; and been told By voices how men lived of old. Among the heavens his eye can fee Face of thing that is to be; And, if men report him right, He can whifper words of might. —Now another day is come, Fitter hope and nobler doom : SONG, ETC. 103 He hath thrown afide his crook, -And hath buried deep his book ; Armour rufting in his halls On the blood of Clifford calls ;— © Quell the Scot,’ exclaims the Lance— Bear me to the heart of France, Is the longing of the Shield— Tell thy name, thou trembling Field ; Field of death, where’er thou be, Groan thou with our victory ! Happy day, and mighty hour, When our fhepherd, in his power, Mailed and horfed, with lance and fword, ' To his anceftors reftored, Like a re-appearing ftar, Like a glory from afar, Firft fhall head the flock of war!” Alas! the fervent harper did not know That for a tranquil foul the lay was framed, Who, long compelled in humble watks to go, Was foftened into feeling, foothed, and tamed. Love had he found in huts where poor men lie, His daily teachers had been woods and rills, The filence that is in the ftarry fky, The fleep that is among the lonely hills. 104 BROUGHAM CASTLE. In him the favage virtue of the race, Revenge, and all ferocious thoughts, were dead: Nor did he change ; but kept in lofty place The wifdom which adverfity had bred. Glad were the vales, and every cottage hearth ; The Shepherd-lord was honoured more and more : And, ages after he was laid in earth, ‘‘ The Good Lord Clifford” was the name he bore. Black Comb. ter) WRITTEN WITH A SLATE-PENCIL On a Stone, on the fide of the Mountain of Black Comb, Cumberland. TAY, bold adventurer! reft awhile thy limbs BS On this commodious feat ; for much remains Of hard afcent before thou reach the top y Of this huge eminence,—from blacknefs named, ex And, to far-travelled ftorms of fea and land, A favourite fpot of tournament and war! But thee may no fuch boifterous vifitants Moleft ; may gentle breezes fan thy brow ; And neither cloud conceal, nor mifty air -&y Bedim the grand terraqueous fpectacle, ' From centre to circumference unveiled ! ~ Know, if thou grudge not to prolong thy reft, That, on the fummit whither thou art bound, A geographic labourer pitched his tent, P 106 BLACK COMB. With books fupplied and inftruments of art, To meafure height and diftance ; lonely tafk, Week after week purfued !—To him was given Full many a glimpfe (but fparingly beftowed On timid man) of Nature’s procefles Upon the exalted hills. He made report That once, while there he plied his ftudious work Within that canvas dwelling, fuddenly The many-coloured map before his eyes Became invifible: for all around Had darknefs fallen—unthreatened, unproclaimed— As if the golden day itfelf had been Extinguifhed in a moment ; total gloom, In which he fate alone, with unclofed eyes, Upon the blinded mountain’s filent top ! ——— VIEW FROM THE TOP OF BLACK COMB. This height a miniftering angel might fele@ : For from the fummit of BLack Come (dread name Derived from clouds and ftorms !) the ampleft range Of unobftructed profpec& may be seen That Britifh ground commands :—low dufky ues . Where Trent is nurfed, far fouthward! Cambrian Hills ‘To the fouth-weft, a multitudinous fhow ; And, in a line of eye-fight linked with thefe, VIEW FROM THE TOP OF BLACK COMB. 107 The hoary peaks of Scotland that give birth To Teviot’s ftream, to Annan, Tweed, and Clyde ;— Crowding the quarter whence the fun comes forth, Gigantic mountains rough with crags; beneath, Right at the imperial ftation’s weftern bafe, Main ocean, breaking audibly, and ftretched Far into filent regions, blue and pale ; And vifibly engirding Mona’s Ifle That, as we left the plain, before our fight Stood like a lofty mount, uplifting flowly (Above the convex of the watery globe) Into clear view the cultured fields that ftreak Its habitable fhores ; but now appears A dwindled object, and fubmits to lie At the fpectator’s feet.—Yon azure ridge, Is it a perifhable cloud—or there Do we behold the frame of Erin’s coaft? Land fometimes by the roving fhepherd fwain (Like the bright confines of another world) Not doubtfully perceived.—Look homeward now ! In depth, in height, in circuit, how ferene The f{pectacle, how pure !—Of Nature’s works, In earth, and air, and earth-embracing fea, A revelation infinite it feems ; Difplay auguft of man’s inheritance, Of Britain’s calm felicity and power. 108 BLACK COMB. TO THE RIVER DUDDON. O mountain ftream! the fhepherd and his cot Are privileged inmates of deep folitude: Nor would the niceft anchorite exclude A field or two of brighter green, or plot Of tillage-ground, that feemeth like a fpot Of ftationary funfhine ; thou haft viewed Thefe only, Duddon ! with their paths renewed By fits and ftarts, yet this contents thee not. Thee hath fome awful fpirit impelled to leave, Utterly to defert the haunts of men. Though fimple thy companions were and few ; And through this wildernefs a paflage cleave, Attended but by thy own voice, fave when The clouds and fowls of the air thy way purfue. The Brothers. Ano q ka HESE tourifts, heaven preferve us! needs mutt live A profitable life: fome glance along, is y” And they were butterflies to wheel about Se ay =; ; ~ Long as the Summer lafted: fome, as wife, PES ae Sit perched, with book and pencil on their knee, €\5 And look and feribble, fcribble on and look, Nay, Sir, for aught I know, That chafm is much the fame— LEONARD. But, furely, yonder THE BROTHERS. 115 PRIEST. Ay, there, indeed, your memory is a friend That does not play you falfe.—On that tall pike (It is the lonelieft place of all thefe hills) There were two fprings which bubbled fide by fide, As if they had been made that they might be Companions for each other: ten years back, Clofe to thofe brother fountains, the huge crag Was rent with lightning, one is dead and gone, The other, left behind, is fowing ftill. For accidents and changes fuch as thefe, We want not ftore of them ;—a waterfpout Will bring down half a mountain ; what a feaft For folks that wander up and down like you, To fee an acre’s breadth of that wide cliff One roaring cataract!—A fharp May ftorm Will come with loads of January fnow, And in one night fend twenty fcore of fheep To feed the ravens; or a fhepherd dies By fome untoward death among the rocks: The ice breaks up and {weeps away a bridge— A wood is felled :—and then for our own homes ! A child is born or chriftened, a field ploughed, A daughter fent to fervice, a web fpun, The old houfe-clock is decked with a new face ; And hence, fo far from wanting facts or dates To chronicle the time, we all have here 116 THE BROTHERS, A pair of diaries, one ferving, Sir, For the whole dale, and one for each fire-fide— Yours was a ftranger’s judgment: for hiftorians, Commend me to thefe valleys ! LEONARD. Yet your churchyard Seems, if fuch freedom may be ufed with you, To fay that you are heedlefs of the paft : An orphan could not find his mother’s grave : Here’s neither head nor foot-{tone, plate of brafs, Crofsbones nor fkull,—type of our earthly ftate, Or emblem of our hopes: the dead man’s home Is but a fellow to that pafture-field. PRIEST. Why, there, Sir, is a thought that’s new to me ! The ftone-cutters, *tis true, might beg their bread If every Englifh churchyard were like ours ; Yet yeur conclufion wanders from the truth : We have no need of names and epitaphs ; We talk about the dead by our fire-fides. And then, for our immortal part ! we want No fymbols, Sir, to tell us that plain tale: The thought of death fits eafy on the man . Who has been born and dies among the mountains. THE BROTHERS. LEONARD. Your dalefmen, then, do in each other’s thoughts Poffefs a kind of fecond life: no doubt You, Sir, could help me to the hiftory Of half thefe graves? PRIEST. For eight-fcore winters patt, With what I’ve witneffed, and with what I’ve heard, Perhaps I might; and, on a winter’s evening, If you were feated at my chimney’s nook, By turning o’er thefe hillocks one by one, We two could travel, Sir, through a ftrange round ; Yet all in the broad highway of the world. Now there’s a grave—your foot is half upon it— It looks juft like the reft; and yet that man Died broken-hearted. LEONARD. ‘Tis a common cafe. We'll take another: who is he that lies Beneath yon ridge, the laft of thofe three graves ! It touches on that piece of native rock Left in the churchyard wall. 117 118 THE BROTHERS. PRIEST. That’s Walter Ewbank. He had as white a head and frefh a cheek As ever were produced by youth and age Engendering in the blood of hale fourfcore. Through five long generations had the heart Of Walter’s forefathers o’erflowed the bounds Of their inheritance, that fingle cottage— You fee it yonder !—and thofe few green fields. They toiled and wrought, and ftill, from fire to fon, Each ftruggled, and each yielded as before A little—yet a littlk—and old Walter, | They left to him the family heart, and land, With other burthens than the crop it bore. Year after year the old man {till kept up A cheerful mind,—and buffeted with bond, Intereft, and mortgages ; at laft he fank, And went into his grave before his time. Poor Walter! whether it was care that fpurred him, God only knows, but to the very laft He had the lighteft foot in Ennerdale: His pace was never that of an old man: I almoft fee him tripping down the path With his two grandfons after him :—but you, Unlefs our landlord be your hoft to-night, Have far to travel,—and on thefe rough paths Even in the longeft day of midfummer— THE BROTHERS, 11g LEONARD. But thofe two orphans ! PRIEST. Orphans !—Such they were— Yet not while Walter lived :—for, though their parents Lay buried fide by fide as now they lie, The old man was a father to the boys, ‘Two fathers in one father : and if tears, Shed when he talked of them where they were not, And hauntings from the infirmity of love, Are aught of what makes up a mother’s heart, This old man, in the day of his old age, Was half a mother to them.—If you weep, Sir, To hear a ftranger talking about ftrangers, Heaven blefs you when you are among your kindred! Ay—you may turn that way—it is a grave Which will bear looking at. LEONARD. Thefe boys—I hope They loved this good old man ?— PRIEST. They did—and truly : But that was what we almoit overlooked, 120 THE BROTHERS. They were fuch darlings of each other. For, Though from their cradles they had lived with Walter, The only kinfman near them, and though he Inclined to them by reafon of his age, With a more fond familiar tendernefs, They, notwithftanding, had much love to-fpare, And it all went into each other’s hearts, Leonard, the elder by juft eighteen months, Was two years taller: *twas a joy to fee, To hear, to meet them !—From their houfe the fchool _ Was diftant three fhort miles—and in the time Of ftorm and thaw, when every water-courfe And unbridged ftream, fuch as you may have noticed Croffing our roads at every hundred fteps, Was {wollen into a noify rivulet, Would Leonard then, when elder boys perhaps Remained at home, go ftaggering through the fords, Bearing his Brother on his back. I’ve feen him, © On windy days, in one of thofe ftray brooks, Ay, more than once, I’ve feen him mid-leg deep, Their two books lying both on a dry ftone Upon the hither fide: and once I faid, As I remember, looking round thefe rocks — And hills on which we all of us were born, That God who made the great book of the world Would blefs fuch piety— THE BROTHERS. 121 LEONARD. It may be then— PRIEST. Never did worthier lads break Englifh bread ; The fineft Sunday that the Autumn faw, With all its mealy clufters of ripe nuts, Could never keep thofe boys away from church, Or tempt them to an hour of Sabbath breach. Leonard and James! I warrant, every corner Among thefe rocks, and every hollow place Where foot could come, to one or both of them Was known as well as to the flowers that grow there. Like roebucks they went bounding o’er the hills: They played like two young ravens on the crags : Then they could write—ay, and fpeak too, as well As many of their betters; and for Leonard! The very night before he went away, In my own houfe I put into his hand A Bible, and I’d wager twenty pounds That, if he is alive, he has it yet. LEONARD. It feems, thefe Brothers have not lived to be A comfort to each other.— R 122 THE BROTHERS. PRIEST. That they might Live to fuch end, is what both old and young, In this our valley, all of us have wifhed, And what, for my part, I have often prayed : But Leonard— LEONARD, Then James ftill is left among vou? PRIEST. Tis of the elder Brother I am {peaking : They had an uncle ;—he was at that time A thriving man, and trafficked on the feas: And, but for that fame uncle, to this hour Leonard had never handled rope or fhroud. For the boy loved the life which we lead here ; And, though of unripe years, a ftripling only, His foul was knit to this his native foil. But, as I faid, old Walter was too weak To ftrive with fuch a torrent; when he died, The eftate and houfe were fold; and all their fheep, A pretty flock, and which, for aught 1 know, Had clothed the Ewbanks for a thoufand years :— Well—all was gone, and they were deftitute ; THE BROTHERS. And Lewnard, chiefly for his Brother’s fake, Refolvec to try his fortune on the feas. *Tis now twelve years fince we had tidings from him. If there was one among us who had heard ‘That Leonard Ewbank was come home again, From the great Gavel, down by Leeza’s banks, And down the Enna, far as Egremont, The day would be a very feftival ; And thofe two be!!s of ours, which there you fee— Hanging in the open air—but, O good Sir! This is fad talk—they’ll never found for him— Living or dead.—When laft we heard of him, He was in flavery amoag the Moors Upon the Barbary coaft.-—’T’ was not a little That would bring down his fpirit ; and, no doubt, Before it ended in his death, the youth Was fadly croffed-—Poor Leonard! when we parted, He took me by the hand, and faid to me, If ever the day came when he was rich, He would return, and on his father’s land He would grow old among us. LEONARD. If that day Should come, ’twould needs be a glad day for him ; He would himfelf, no doubt, be happy then As any that fhould meet him— 124 THE BROTHERS, PRIEST. Happy! Sir-— LEONARD. You faid his kindred all were in their graves, And that he had one Brother— PRIEST. That is but A fellow tale of forrow. From his youth James, though not fickly, yet was delicate ; And Leonard being always by his fide Had done fo many offices about him, That, though he was not of a timid nature, Yet ftill the fpirit of a mountain boy 3 In him was fomewhat checked; and, when his Brother - Was gone to fea, and he was left alone, The little colour that he had was foon Stolen from his cheek; he drooped, and pined, and pine¢c— LEONARD. But thefe are all the graves of full-grown men! PRIEST. Ay, Sir, that paffed away: we took him to us; He was the child of all the dale—he lived Three months with one, and fix months with another; THE BROTHERS. 125 And wanted neither food, nor clothes, nor love: And many, many happy days were his. But, whether blithe or fad, ’tis my belief His abfent Brother ftill was at his heart, And, when he lived beneath our roof, we found (A practice till this time unknown to him) That often, rifing from his bed at night, He in his fleep would walk about, and fleeping He fought his Brother Leonard.— You are moved! Forgive me, Sir: before I fpoke to you, I judged you moft unkindly. LEONARD. But this youth, How did he die at laft? PRIEST. : One {weet May morning, (It will be twelve years fince when Spring returns, ) He had gone forth among the new-dropped lambs, With two or three companions, whom it chanced Some further bufinefs f{ummoned to a houfe Which ftands at the dale-head. James, tired perhaps, Or from fome other caufe, remained behind. - You fee yon precipice ;—it almoft looks Like fome vaft building made of many crags ; And in the midft is one particular rock 126 THE BROTHERS. That rifes like a column from the vale, - Whence by our fhepherds it is called THE PILLar. James pointed to its fummit, over which They all had purpofed to return together, And told them that he there would wait for them ; They parted, and his comrades pafled that way Some two hours after, but they did not find him Upon the fummit—at the appointed place. Of this they took no heed: but one of them, Going by chance at night into the houfe Which at that time was James’s home, there learned That nobody had feen him all that day: The morning came, and ftill he was unheard of : ‘The neighbours were alarmed, and to the brook Some went, and fome towards the lake: ere noon They found him at the foot of that fame rock— Dead, and with mangled limbs. ‘The third day after I buried him, poor youth, and there he lies ! LEONARD. And that, then, zs his grave '— Before his death You fay that he faw many happy years ? PRIEST. Ay, that he did— LEONARD. And all went well with him— HONISTER. CRAG, LOOKING WEST. Dy, 1264 Ae ~ ar THE BROTHERS. 127 PRIEST. If he had one, the youth had twenty homes. LEONARD. And you believe, then, that his mind was eafy ?— PRIEST. Yes, long before he died, he found that time Is a true friend to forrow; and unlefs _ His thoughts were turned on Leonard’s lucklefs fortune, He talked about him with a cheerful love. LEONARD. He could not come to an unhallowed end! PRIEST. Nay, God forbid !—You recolle& I mentioned A habit which difquietude and grief Had brought upon him; and we all conjectured That, as the day was warm, he had lain down Upon the grafs,—and, waiting for his comrades, He there had fallen afleep ; that, in his fleep, He to the margin of the precipice Had walked, and from the fummit had fallen headlong. And fo no doubt he perifhed : at the time We guefs that in his hands he muft have had His fhepherd’s ftaff ; for midway in the cliff 128 THE BROTHERS. It had been caught ; and there for many years It hung—and mouldered there. The Prieft here ended—- The Stranger would have thanked him, but he felt A gufhing from his heart, that took away — The power of fpeech. Both left the fpot in filence ; And Leonard, when they reached the churchyard gate, As the Prieft lifted up the latch, turned round,— And looking at the grave, he faid, ‘* My Brother.” The Vicar did not hear the words: and now, Pointing towards the cottage, he entreated That Leonard would partake his homely fare : The other thanked him with a fervent voice ; But added, that, the evening being calm, He would purfue his journey. So they parted. It was not long ere Leonard reached a grove , That overhung the road: he there ftopped fhort, And, fitting down beneath the trees, reviewed All that the Prieft had faid: his early years Were with him in his heart: his cherifhed hopes, And thoughts which had been his an hour before, All preffed on him with fuch a weight, that now, This vale where he had been fo happy, feemed A place in which he could not bear to live: So he relinquifhed all his purpofes. He travelled on to Egremont: and thence, THE BROTHERS. That night he wrote a letter to the Prieft, Reminding him of what had paffed between them ; And adding, with a hope to be forgiven, ‘That it was from the weaknefs of his heart He had not dared to tell him who he was. This done, he went on fhipboard, and is now A feaman, a grey-headed mariner. 129 Defcriptions of Scenery. | eB INFLUENCE OF NATURAL OBFECTS In calling forth and ftrengthening the Imagination in ee ana Early Youth. ISDOM and fpirit of the univerfe ! Thou foul, that art the eternity of thought! | And giv’f{t to forms and images a breath And everlafting motion! not in vain, By day or ftar-light, thus from my firft dawn Of childhood didft thou intertwine for me The paffions that build up our human foul ; Not with the mean and vulgar works of man,— But with high objects, with enduring things, - With life and nature ; purifying thus The elements of feeling and of thought, And fanétifying by fuch difcipline Both pain and fear,—until we recognize A grandeur in the beatings of the heart. INFLUENCE OF NATURAL OBJECTS. 13! Nor was this fellowfhip vouchfafed to me With ftinted kindnefs. In November days, When vapours rolling down the valleys made A lonely fcene more lonefome ; among woods At noon; and mid the calm of Summer nights, When, by the margin of the trembling lake, Beneath the gloomy hills, I homeward went In folitude, fuch intercourfe was mine: Twas mine among the fields both day and night, And by the waters all the Summer long. And in the frofty feafon, when the fun Was fet, and, vifible for many a mile, The cottage windows through the twilight blazed, I heeded not the fummons :—happy time It was, indeed, for all of us; for me It was a time of rapture !—Clear and loud The village clock tolled fix—I wheeled about, Proud and exulting like an untired horfe That cares not for its home.—All fhod with fteel We hiffed along the polifhed ice, in games Confederate, imitative of the chafe And woodland pleafures,—the refounding horn, The pack loud-bellowing and the hunted hare. So through the darknefs and the cold we flew, And not a voice was idle: with the din Meanwhile the precipices rang aloud ; The leaflefs trees and every icy crag (132 DESCRIPTIONS OF SCENERY. Tinkled like iron; while the diftant hills Into the tumult fent an alien found Of melancholy, not unnoticed, while the ftars, Eaftward, were fparkling clear, and in the weft The orange fky of evening died away. Not feldom from the uproar I retired Into a filent bay, or f{portively Glanced fideway, leaving the tumultuous throng, To cut acrofs the image of a ftar, That gleamed upon the ice; and oftentimes, When we had given our bodies to the wind, And all the fhadowy banks on either fide Came {weeping through the darknefs, {pinning ftill The rapid line of motion, then at once Have I, reclining back upon my heels, Stopped fhort ; yet ftill the folitary cliffs Wheeled by me—even as if the earth had rolled With vifible motion her diurnal round ! Behind me did they ftretch in folemn train, Feebler and feebler, and I ftood and watched, Till all was tranquil as a Summer fea. A SUMMER FORENOON. 133 A SUMMER FORENOON. ‘T'was Summer, and the fun had mounted high : Southward the landfcape indiftin@ly glared Through a pale fteam; but all the northern downs, In cleareft air afcending, fhowed far off A furface dappled o’er with fhadows flung From many a brooding cloud, far as the fight Could reach, thofe many fhadows lay in fpots Determined and unmoved, with fteady beams Of bright and pleafant funfhine interpofed ; Pleafant to him who on the foft cool mofs Extends his carelefs limbs along the front Of fome huge cave, whofe rocky ceiling cafts A twilight of its own, an ample fhade, Where the wren warbles, while the dreaming man, Half confcious of the foothing melody, With fidelong eye looks out upon the fcene, By that impending covert made more foft, More low and diftant! Other lot was mine, Yet with good hope that foon I fhould obtain As grateful refting-place and livelier joy. From“ The Excurfion,’ Book I. 134 DESCRIPTIONS OF SCENERY. LINES Written while Sailing in a Boat at Evening. How richly glows the water’s breaft Before us, tinged with Evening hues, While, facing thus the crimfon weft, The Boat her filent courfe purfues! And fee how dark the backward ftream! A little moment paft fo fmiling ! And ftill, perhaps, with faithlefs gleam, Some other loiterers beguiling. Such views the youthful Bard allure ; But, heedlefs of the following gloom, He deems their colours fhall endure Till peace go with him to the tomb. And let him nurfe his fond deceit, — And what if he mutt die in forrow ! Who would not cherifh dreams fo fweet, _ Though grief and pain may come to-morrow ? A “NIGHT-PIECE, 135 A NIGHT-PIECE. The fky is overcaft With a continuous cloud of texture clofe, Heavy and wan, all whitened by the moon, Which through that vale is indiftinctly feen, A dull, contracted circle, yielding light So feebly fpread that not a fhadow falls, Chequering the ground—from rock, plant, tree, or tower. At length a pleafant inftantaneous gleam Startles the penfive traveller as he treads His lonefome path, with unobferving eye Bent earthwards ; he looks up—the clouds are fplit Afunder,—and above his head he fees The clear moon, and the glory of the heavens. There in a black blue vault fhe fails along, Followed by multitudes of ftars, that, fmall And fharp, and bright, along the dark abyfs Drive as fhe drives ;—how faft they wheel away, Yet vanifh not !—the wind is in the tree, But they are filent ;—{till they roll along Immeafurably diftant ;—and the vault, Built round by thofe white clouds, enormous clouds, Still deepens its unfathomable depth. 130: DESCRIPTIONS OF SCENERY. At length the vifion clofes; and the mind, Not undifturbed by the delight it feels, Which flowly fettles into peaceful calm, Is left to mufe upon the folemn fcene. | NUTTING. It feems a day, (I {peak of one from many fingled out,) One of thofe heavenly days that cannot die; When forth I fallied from our cottage-door, With a huge wallet o’er my fhoulders flung, A nutting-crook in hand, and turn’d my fteps Towards the diftant woods, a figure quaint, Tricked out in proud difguife of caft-off weeds Which for that fervice had been hufbanded, By exhortation of my frugal dame. Motley accoutrement, of power to fmile At thorns, and brakes, and brambles,—and, in truth, More ragged than need was. Among the woods, And o’er the pathlefs rocks, I forced my way, Until, at length, I came to one dear nook Unvifited, where not a broken bough nae Drooped with its withered leaves, ungracious fign Of devaftation, but the hazels rofe Tall and erect, with milk-white clufters hung, NUTTING. 137 A virgin fcene!—A little while I ftood, Breathing with fuch fuppreffion of the heart As joy delights in; and with wife reftraint Voluptuous, fearlefs of a rival, eyed The banguet,—or beneath the trees I fat Among the flowers, and with the flowers I played ; A temper known to thofe, who, after long And weary expectation, have been bleffed With fudden happinefs beyond all hope.— Perhaps it was a bower beneath whofe leaves The violets of five feafons re-appear And fade, unfeen by any human eye ; Where fairy water-breaks do murmur on For ever,—and I. faw the fparkling foam, And with my cheek on one of thofe green ftones That, fleeced with mofs, beneath the fhady trees, Lay round me, fcattered like a flock of fheep,— I heard the murmur and the murmuring found, In that {weet mood when pleafure loves to pay Tribute to eafe; and of its joy fecure, The heart luxuriates with indifferent things, Watting its kindlinefs on ftocks and ftones, And on the vacant air. Then up I rofe, And dragged to earth both branch and bough, with crafh And mercilefs ravage ; and the fhady nook Of hazels, and the green and mofly bower, Deformed and fullied, patiently gave up 4% ‘DESCRIPTIONS OF SCENERY. Their quiet being; and, unlefs I now Confound my prefent feelings with the paft, Even then, when from the bower I turned away Exulting, rich beyond the wealth of kings, I felt a fenfe of pain when I beheld The filent trees and the intruding fky.— , Then, deareft maiden! move along thefe fhades — In gentlenefs of heart; with gentle hand ‘Touch—for there is a fpirit in the woods. LINES Written in Early Spring. I heard a thoufand blended notes, While in a grove I fat reclined, In that fweet mood when pleafant thoughts Bring fad thoughts to the mind, To her fair works did Nature link The human foul that through me ran ; And much it grieved my heart to think What man has made of man. Through primrofe tufts, in that {weet bower, The periwinkle trailed its wreaths ; And ’tis my faith that every flower Enjoys the air it breathes. MY HEART LEAPS UP. The birds around me hopped and played, Their thoughts I cannot meafure :— But the leaft motion which they made, It feemed a thrill of pleafure. The budding twigs fpread out their fan, To catch the breezy air ; And I muft think, do all I can, That there was pleafure there. If I thefe thoughts may not prevent, If fuch be of my creed the plan, Have I not reafon to lament What man has made of man? MIME ART LEAP SIP: My heart leaps up when I behold A rainbow in the fky: So was it when my life began ; So is it now I am a man; So be it when I fhall grow old, ’ Or let me die! The child is father of the man ; And I could wifh my days to be Bound each to each by natural piety. 139 140 DESCRIPTIONS OF SCENERY. YEW-TREES. There is a Yew-tree, pride of Lorton Vale, Which to this day ftands fingle, in the midft Of its own darknefs, as it ftood of yore, Not loth to furnifh weapons for the bands Of Umfraville or Percy, ere they marched To Scotland’s heaths ; or thofe that croffed the sea, And drew their founding bows at Azincour, Perhaps at earlier Crecy, or Poictiers. Of vaft circumference and gloom profound This folitary tree !—a living thing Produced too flowly ever to decay ; Of form and afpe&t too magnificent To be deftroyed. But worthier {till of note Are thofe fraternal four of Borrowdale, Joined in one folemn and capacious grove ; Huge trunks |—and each particular trunk a growth Of intertwifted fibres ferpentine Up-coiling, and inveterately convolved,— Nor uninformed with phantafy, and looks That threaten the profane ;—a pillared fhade, Upon whofe grafilefs floor of red-brown hue, By fheddings from the pining umbrage tinged Perennially—beneath whofe fable roof - Of boughs, as if for feftal purpofe, decked With unrejoicing berries, ghoftly fhapes YEW-TREES, BORROWDALE., D. £40, ae SONNET TO A BROOK. May meet at noontide—Fear and trembling Hope, Silence and Forefight— Death the fkeleton And Time the fhadow,—there to celebrate, As in a natural temple fcattered o’er With altars undifturbed of mofly ftone, United worfhip ; or in mute repofe To lie, and liften to the mountain flood Murmuring from Glaramara’s inmoft caves. SONNET TO A BROOK. Brook! whofe fociety the Poet feeks, Intent his wafted fpirits to renew ; And whom the curious painter doth purfue Through rocky pafles, among flowery creeks, And tracks thee dancing down thy water—breaks ; If I fome type of thee did with to view, Thee,—and not thee thyfelf, I would not do Like Grecian artifts, give thee human cheeks, Channels for tears; no Naiad fhould’{t thou be, Have neither limbs, feet, feathers, joints, nor hairs ; It feems the eternal foul is clothed in thee With purer robes than thofe of flefh and blood, And hath beftowed on thee a better good ; Unwearied joy, and life without its cares. 142 DESCRIPTIONS OF SCENERY. AD MONITION, Intended more particularly for the perufal of thofe who may have happened to be enamoured of fome beautiful Place of Retreat in the Country of the Lakes. Yes, there is holy pleafure in thine eye! —The lovely cottage in the guardian nook Hath ftirred thee deeply ; with its own dear brook, Its own {mall pafture, almoft its own fky! But covet not the abode—Oh ! do not figh, As many do, repining while they look; Sighing a wifh to tear from Nature’s book This blifsful leaf with harfh impiety. Think what the home would be if it were thine, Even thine, though few thy wants !—Roof, window, door, The very flowers are facred to the poor, The rofes to the porch which they entwine : Yea, all, that now enchants thee, from the day On which it fhould be touched, would melt, and melt away | SONNETS. “Beloved Vale!” I faid, ‘‘when I fhall con Thofe many records of my childifh years, Remembrance of myfelf and of my peers Will prefs me down : to think of what is gone SONNETS. 143 Will be an awful thought, if life have one.”’ But, when into the Vale I came, no fears Diftrefled me; I looked round, I fhed no tears ; Deep thought, or awful vifion, I had none. By thoufand petty fancies I was croffled, To fee the trees, which I had thought fo tall, Mere dwarfs; the brooks fo narrow, fields fo fmall. A juggler’s balls old Time about him toffed ; I looked, I ftared, I fmiled, I laughed ; and all The weight of fadnefs was in wonder loft. The world is too much with us; late and foon, Getting and fpending, we lay wafte our powers : Little we fee in Nature that is ours; We have given our hearts away, a fordid boon! This fea that bares her bofom to the moon; The winds that will be howling at all hours, And are up-gathered now like fleeping flowers ; For this, for everything, we are out of tune ; It moves us not.—Great God! I’d rather be A pagan fuckled in a creed outworn ; So might I, ftanding on this pleafant lea, Have glimpfes that would make me lefs forlorn ; Have fight of Proteus rifing from the fea ; Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn. 144 DESCRIPTIONS OF SCENERY. How {weet it is, when mother Fancy rocks ‘The wayward brain, to faunter through a wood ! An old place, full of many a lovely brood, Tall trees, green arbours, and ground-flowers in flocks ; And wild rofe tip-toe upon hawthorn ftocks, Like to a bonny lafs, who plays her pranks At wakes and fairs with wandering mountebanks,— When the ftands crefting the clown’s head, and mocks The crowd beneath her. Verily, I think, © Such place to me is fometimes like a dream, Or map of the whole world : thoughts, link by link, Enter through ears and eyefight, with fuch gleam Of all things, that at laft in fear I fhrink, And leap at once from the delicious ftream. Mark the concentrated hazels that enclofe Yon old grey Stone, protected from the ray Of noontide funs :—and even the beams that play And glance, while wantonly the rough wind blows, Are feldom free to touch the mofs that grows Upon that roof—amid embowering gloom The very image framing of a tomb, In which fome ancient chieftain finds repofe Among the lonely mountains.—Live, ye trees ! And thou, grey Stone, the penfive likenefs keep SONNETS. 145 Of a dark chamber where the mighty fleep: For more than fancy to the influence bends, When folitary Nature condefcends To mimic Time’s forlorn humanities. IT IS A BEAUTEOUS EVENING. It is a beauteous evening, calm and free, The holy time is quiet as a nun Breathlefs with adoration ; the broad fun Is finking down in its tranquillity ; The gentlenefs of Heaven is on the fea: Liften! the mighty being is awake, And doth with his eternal motion make A found like thunder everlaftingly. Dear child! dear girl! that walkeft with me here, If thou appear’{t untouch’d by folemn thought, Thy nature therefore is not lefs divine : Thou lieft ‘in Abraham’s bofom”? all the year ; And worfhipp’ft at the temple’s inner fhrine, God being with thee when we know it, not. 146 DESCRIPTIONS OF SCENERY. CALM IS ALL NATURE AS A RESTING WHEEL. Calm is all nature as a refting wheel. ‘The kine are couch’d upon the dewy grafs ; The horfe alone, feen dimly as I pafs, Is cropping audibly his later meal : Dark is the ground, a flumber feems to fteal O’er vale, and mountain, and the ftarlefs fky, Now, in this blank of things, a harmony, Home-felt, and home-created, comes to heal That grief for which the fenfes ftill fupply Frefh food; for only then, when memory Is hufh’d, am I at reft. My friends! reftrain Thofe bufy cares that would allay my pain ; Oh, leave me to myfelf! nor let me feel The officious touch that makes me droop again. Domettic Poems. WEP TEP ET DAMB. A PASTORAL. HE dew was falling faft, the ftars began to blink ; 7 I heard a voice: it faid, “ Drink, pretty creature, drink ! ” iS And, looking o’er the hedge, before me I efpied iS A {now-white mountain lamb, with a maiden at its fide. Z 48 No other fheep was near, the lamb was all alone, And by a flender cord was tethered to a ftone; With one knee on the grafs did the little maiden kneel, While to that mountain lamb fhe gave its evening meal. The lamb, while from her hand he thus his fupper took, Seemed to feaft with head and ears, and his tail with pleafure fhook. “ Drink, pretty creature, drink,” fhe faid, in fuch a tone That I almoft received her heart into my own, 148 DOMESTIC POEMS Twas little Barbara Lewthwaite, a child of beauty rare! I watched them with delight ; they were a lovely pair. Now, with her empty can the maiden turned away ; But, ere ten yards were gone, her footfteps did fhe ftay. ‘Towards the lamb fhe looked; and from that fhady place I, unobferved, could fee the workings of her face: If Nature to her tongue could meafured numbers bring, Thus, thought I, to her lamb that little maid might fing :— “What ails thee, young one? What? Why pull fo at thy cord? Is it not well with thee? Well both for bed and board ? Thy plot of grafs is foft, and green as grafs can be; Reft, little young one, reft ; what is’t that aileth thee ? “What is it thou would’ft feek? What is wanting to thy heart? Thy limbs, are they not ftrong? And beautiful thou art : This grafs is tender grafs; thefe flowers they have no peers ; And that green corn, all day, is ruftling in thy ears ! “Tf the fun be fhining hot, do but ftretch thy woollen chain, This beech is ftanding by, its covert thou canft gain ; For rain and mountain ftorms ! the like thou need’ft not fear— The rain and ftorm are things which fearcely can come here. THE PET LAMB. 149 *¢ Reft, little young one, reft; thou haft forgot the day When my father found thee firft in places far away: Many flocks were on the hills, but thou wert owned by none, And thy mother from thy fide for evermore was gone. “* He took thee in his arms, and in pity brought thee home : A bleffed day for thee! then whither would’ft thou roam ! A faithful nurfe thou haft; the dam that did thee yean Upon the mountain-tops no kinder could have been. “Thou know’ ft that twice a day I have brought thee in this can Frefh water from the brook, as clear as ever ran ; And twice in the day, when the ground is wet with dew, I bring thee draughts of milk, warm milk it is, and new. “« Thy limbs will fhortly be twice as ftout as they are now, Then I’ll yoke thee to my cart like a pony in the plough ; My playmate thou fhalt be ; and, when the wind is cold, Our hearth fhall be thy bed, our houfe fhall be thy fold. «Tt will not, will not reft !—Poor creature, can it be That ’tis thy mother’s heart which is working fo in thee? Things that I know not of, belike to thee are dear, And dreams of things which thou can’ft neither fee nor hear. 159 DOMESTIC POEMS. “¢ Alas, the mountain-tops that look fo green and fair! I’ve heard of fearful winds and darknefs that come there ; ‘The little brooks that feem all paftime and all play, When they are angry, roar like lions for their prey. ‘* Here thou need’ft not dread the raven in the fky ; Night and day thou art fafe,—-our cottage is hard by. - Why bleat fo after me? Why pull fo at thy chain? Sleep—and at break of day I will come to thee again!” -——As homeward through the lane I went with lazy feet, © This fong to myfelf did I oftentimes repeat ; And it feemed, as I retraced the ballad line by line, That but half of it was hers, and one-half of it was mine. | Again, and once again did I repeat the fong ; “* Nay,” faid I, ‘* more than half to the dam/el muft belong, For fhe looked with fuch a look, and fhe fpake with fuch a tone, That I almoft received her heart into my own.” LUGIAGR Are OR SOLITUDE. Oft I had heard of Lucy Gray ; And when I crofled the wild, I chanced to fee at break of day The folitary child. LUCY GRAY. 151 No mate, no comrade Lucy knew, She dwelt on a wild moor, The fweeteft thing that ever grew Befide a human door. You yet may {py the fawn at play, ‘The hare upon the green; But the fweet face of Lucy Gray Will never more be feen. “'To-night will be a ftormy night— You to the town mutt go ; And take a lantern, child, to light Your mother through the fnow.”’ “That, father, I will gladly do; *Tis fearcely afternoon— The minfter clock has juft ftruck two, And yonder is the moon.” At this the father raifed his hook, And f{napped a faggot-band ; He plied his work ;—and Lucy took The lantern in her hand. Not blither is the mountain roe: With many a wanton ftroke Her feet difperfe the powdery fnow, That rifes up like fmoke. 152 DOMESTIC POEMS. The ftorm came on before its time: She wandered up and down; And many a hill did Lucy climb ; But never reached the town. The wretched parents all that night Went fhouting far and wide ; But there was neither found nor fight To ferve them for a guide. At day-break on a hill they ftood That overlooked the moor ; And thence they faw the bridge of wood, A furlong from their door. And, turning homeward, now they cried, “©Tn heaven we all fhall meet !” When in the fnow the mother {pied The print of Lucy’s feet. Then downward from the fteep hill’s edge They tracked the footmarks {mall : And through the broken hawthorn hedge, And by the long ftone wall : And then an open field they croffed : The marks were ftill the fame ; They tracked them on, nor ever loft ; And to the bridge they came, THREE YEARS SHE GREW IN SUN AND SHOWER. 153 They followed from the fnowy bank The footmarks one by one, Into the middle of the plank ; And further there were none ! Yet fome maintain that to this day She is a living child: That you may fee fweet Lucy Gray Upon the lonefome wild. O’er rough and fmooth fhe trips along, And never looks behind ; And fings a folitary fong That whiftles in the wind. THREE YEARS SHE GREW IN SUN AND SHOWER. Three years fhe grew in fun and fhower, Then Nature faid ‘‘ a lovelier flower On earth was never fown ; This child I to inyfelf will take: She fhall be mine, and I will make A lady of my own. 154 DOMESTIC POEMS, “< Myfelf will to my darling be Both law and impulfe ; and with me The girl, in rock and plain, In earth and heaven, in glade and bower, Shall feel an overfeeing power To kindle or reftrain. “¢ She fhall be fportive as the fawn, That wild with glee acrofs the lawn Or up the mountain fprings ; And hers fhall be the breathing balm, And hers the filence and the calm Of mute infenfate things. “ The floating clouds their {tate fhall lend To her; for her the willow bend ; Nor {hall fhe fail to fee E’en in the motions of the ftorm Grace that fhall mould the maiden’s form By filent fympathy. “¢ The ftars of midnight fhall be clear To her ; and fhe fhall lean her ear In many a fecret place Where rivulets dance their wayward round, And beauty born of murmuring found Shall pafs into her face. SHE WAS A PHANTOM OF DELIGHT. “< And vital feelings of delight Shall rear her form to ftately height, Her virgin bofom {well ; Such thoughts to Lucy I will give While fhe and J together live Here in this happy dell.” Thus Nature fpake. “The work was done— How foon my Lucy’s race was run | She died, and left to me This heath, this calm and quiet fcene ; The memory of what has been, And never more will be. SHE WAS A PHANTOM OF DELIGHT. She was a phantom of delight When firft fhe gleam’d upon my fight ; A lovely apparition, fent To be a moment’s ornament ; Her eyes as ftars of twilight fair, Like twilight’s, too, her dufky hair; ~ But all things elfe about her drawn From May-time and the cheerful dawn ; 156 DOMESTIC POEMS. A dancing fhape, an image gay, To haunt, to ftartle, and waylay. I faw her upon nearer view, A {fpirit, yet a woman too ! Her houfehold motions light and free, And fteps of virgin liberty; A countenance in which did meet Sweet records, promifes as {weet : A creature not too bright or good For human nature’s daily food, For tranfient forrows, fimple wiles, Praife, blame, love, kiffes, tears, and fmiles. And now I fee with eye ferene The very pulfe of the machine ; A being breathing thoughtful breath, A traveller betwixt life and death ; © The reafon firm, the temperate will, Endurance, forefight, ftrength, and {kill ; A perfe&t woman, nobly plann’d, To warn, to comfort, and command ; And yet a fpirit ftill, and bright With fomething of an angel light. Poems on Flowers. ALA TO THE DAISY. N youth from rock to rock I went, a From hill to hill in difcontent, ‘a Of pleafure high and turbulent, Mott pleafed when moft uneafy ; : shi Ay But now my own delights I make,— * Wa My thirft at every rill can flake,— B And gladly Nature’s love partake Of thee, {weet Daify ! When foothed a while by milder airs, Thee Winter in the garland wears That thinly fhades his few grey hairs ; Spring cannot fhun thee ; While fummer fields are thine by right ; And Autumn, melancholy wight! Doth in thy crimfon head delight, When rains are on thee. 158 POEMS ON FLOWERS. In fhoals and bands, a morrice train, Thou greet’{t the traveller in the lane ; If welcomed once thou count’ft it gain ; ‘Thou art not daunted, Nor car’ft if thou be fet at naught : And oft alone in nooks remote We meet thee, like a pleafant thought When fuch are wanted. Be violets in their fecret mews The flowers the wanton zephyrs choofe ; Proud be the rofe, with rains and dews Her head impearling ; Thou liv’ft with lefs ambitious aim, Yet haft not gone without thy fame; Thou art indeed by many a claim The poet’s darling. If to a rock from rains he fly, Or, fome bright day of April fky, Imprifoned by hot funfhine lie Near the green holly, And wearily at length fhould fare ; He need but look about, and there Thou art! a friend at hand to fcare His melancholy. TO THE DAISY. 159 A hundred times, by rock or bower, Ere thus I have lain couched an hour, Have I derived from thy {weet power Some apprehenfion ; Some fteady love; fome brief delight ; Some memory that had taken flight ; Some chime of fancy, wrong or right ; Or ftray invention. If ftately paffions in me burn, And one chance look to thee fhould turn, I drink out of an humbler urn A lowlier pleafure ; The homely fympathy that heeds The common life our nature breeds ; A wifdom fitted to the needs Of hearts at leifure. When fmitten by the morning ray, I fee thee rife, alert and gay, Then, cheerful flower ! my fpirits play With kindred gladnefs : And when, at dufk, by dews oppreft Thou fink’ft, the image of thy reft Hath often eafed my penfive breaft Of careful fadnefs. 160 POEMS ON FLOWERS. And all day long I number yet, All feafons through, another debt, Which I, wherever thou art met, To thee am owing ; An inftin& call it, a blind fenfe ; A happy, genial influence, | ~Coming one knows not how, nor whence, Nor whither going. Child of the year! that round doft run Thy courfe, bold lover of the fun, » And cheerful when the day’s begun As morning leveret, Thy long-loft praife thou fhalt regain : Dear thou fhalt be to future men As in old time ;—thou not in vain Art Nature’s favourite. TO THE SAME FLOWER. Bright flower! whofe home is everywhere, A pilgrim bold in Nature’s care, And all the long year through, the heir Of joy or forrow, TO THE SAME FLOWER. 161 Methinks that there abides in thee Some concord with humanity, Given to no other flower I fee The foreft thorough ! Is it that man is foon depreffed ? A thoughtlefs thing ! who, once unbleffed, Does little on his memory reft, Or on his reafon ; And thou would’ft teach him how to find A fhelter under every wind, A hope for times that are unkind And every feafon ? Thou wandereft the wide world about, Unchecked by bride or fcrupulous doubt, With friends to greet thee, or without, Yet pleafed and willing ; Meek, yielding to the occafion’s call, And all things fuffering from all, Thy fun@tion apoftolical In peace fulfilling. 162 ‘POEMS ON FLOWERS, TO THE SMALL CELANDINE ; OR, COMMON PILEWORT. Panfies, lilies, kingcups, daifies, Let them live upon their praifes ; Long as there’s a fun that fets, Primrofes will have their glory ; Long as there are violets, They will have a place in ftory : There’s a flower that fhall be mine, ’ Tis the little Celandine. Eyes of fome men travel far For the finding of a ftar ; Up and down the heavens they go, Men that keep a mighty rout ! I’m as great as they, I trow, | Since the day I found thee out, Little flower !—I’]] make a ftir, Like a great aftronomer. TO THE SMALL CELANDINE. 163 Modeft, yet withal an elf Bold, and lavifh of thyfelf : Since we needs mutt firft have met, I have feen thee, high and low, ‘Thirty years or more, and yet "Twas a face I did not know ; Thou haft now, go where I may, Fifty greetings in a day. Ere a leaf is on a bufh, In the time before the thrufh Has a thought about its neft, Thou wilt come with half a call, Spreading out thy glofly breaft Like a carelefs prodigal ; Telling tales about the fun, When we’ve little warmth or none. Poets, vain men in their mood ! Travel with the multitude ; Never heed them ; I aver That they all are wanton wooers ; But the thrifty cottager, Who ftirs little out of doors, Joys to {py thee near her home ; Spring is coming, thou art come ! 164. POEMS ON FLOWERS. Comfort have thou of thy merit, Kindly, unafluming fpirit ! Carelefs of thy neighbourhood, Thou doft fhow thy pleafant face On the moor, and in the wood, In the lane—there’s not a place, Howfoever mean it be, But ’t is good enough for thee. Ill befall the yellow flowers, Children of the flaring hours ! Buttercups, that will be feen,. Whether we will fee or no; Others, too, of lofty mien ; They have done as worldlings do, Taken praife that fhould be thine, Little, humble Celandine ! Prophet of delight and mirth, Scorned and flighted upon earth ! Herald of a mighty band, Of a joyous train enfuing, Singing at my heart’s command, In the lanes my thoughts purfuing, I will fing, as doth behove, Hymns in praife of what I love ! TO THE SAME FLOWER, TO THE SAME FLOWER. Pleafures newly found are fweet, When they lie about our feet : February laft, my heart Firft at fight of thee was glad ; All unheard of as thou art, Thou muft needs, I think, have had, Celandine! and long ago, Praife of which I nothing know. I have not a doubt but he, W hofoe’er the man might be, Who the firft with pointed rays, (Workman worthy to be fainted) Set the fign-board in a blaze, When the rifen fun he painted, Took the fancy from a glance At thy glittering countenance. Soon as gentle breezes bring News of winter’s vanifhing, And the children build their bowers, Sticking kerchief-pots of mould 166 POEMS ON FLOWERS. All about with full-blown flowers, Thick as fheep in fhepherd’s fold! With the proudeft thou art there, Mantling in the tiny fquare. Often have I figh’d to meafure By myfelf a lonely pleafure, Sigh’d to think I read a book, Only read, perhaps, by me; Yet I long could overlook Thy bright coronet and thee, And thy arch and wily ways, And thy ftore of other praife. Blithe of heart, from week to week, Thou doft play at hide-and-feek ; While the patient primrofe fits Like a beggar in the cold, Thou, a flower of wifer wits, Slipp’ft into thy fhelter’d hold ; Bright as any of the train, When ye all are out again. Thou art not beyond the moon, But a thing ‘¢ beneath our fhoon: ” Let, as old Magellan did, Others roam about the fea ; DAFFODILS, 167 Build who will a pyramid ; Praife it is enough for me, If there be but three or four Who will love my little flower. DAFFODILS. I wandered lonely as a cloud That floats on high o’er vales and hills When all at once I faw a crowd, A hoft of golden daffodils ; Befide the lake, beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the breeze. Continuous as the ftars that fhine And twinkle on the milky way, They ftretched in never-ending line Along the margin of a bay: Ten thoufand faw I at a glance, Toffing their heads in fprightly dance. The waves befide them danced, but they Outdid the fparkling waves in glee :— A Poet could not but be gay, In fuch a jocund company : 168 POEMS ON FLOWERS. I gazed—and gazed—but little thought What wealth the fhow to me had brought: For oft when on my couch | lie, In vacant or in penfive mood, They flafh upon that inward eye Which is the blifs of folitude, And then my heart with pleafure fills, And dances with the daffodils. TO THE ROCK IN THE ORCHARD. Who fancied what a pretty fight This rock would be if edged around With living fnowdrops—circlet bright? How glorious to this orchard ground ! Who loved the little rock, and fet Upon its head this coronet ? Was it the humour of a child? Or rather of fome love-fick maid, Whofe brows, the day that fhe was ftyled The fhepherd queen, were thus array’d ! Of man mature, or matron fage ! Or old man toying with his age? a —" STOCK-GHYLL FORCE, NEAK AMBLESIDE. D.260. "4 oy d 3 ‘fs oo" THE WATERFALL AND THE EGLANTINE. 169 I afk’d—’twas whifper’d, the device To each or all might well belong ; It is the fpirit of paradife That prompts fuch work, a {pirit ftrong, _ That gives to all the felf-fame bent Where life is wife and innocent, THE WATERFALL AND THE EGLANTINE. “ Begone, thou fond prefumptuous elf,” Exclaimed a thundering voice, ‘* Nor dare to thruft thy foolith felf Between me and my choice! ” A falling Water, {wollen with {fnows, ‘Thus fpake to a poor Briar-rofe, That, all befpattered with his foam, And dancing high and dancing low, Was living, as a child might know, In an unhappy home. <¢ Doft thou prefume my courfe to block? Off, off! or, puny thing! I’\l hurl thee headlong with the rock To which thy fibres cling.” Z 170 POEMS ON FLOWERS, The flood was tyrannous and {trong ; The patient Briar fuflered long, . Nor did he utter groan or figh, Hoping the danger. would be paft : But, feeing no relief, at laft He ventured to reply. ‘© Ah!” faid the Briar, ‘‘ blame me not ; Why fhould we dwell in ftrife ? We who in this, our natal fpot, Once lived a happy life ! You ftirred me on my rocky bed— What pleafure through my veins you fpread ! The Summer long, from day to day, My leaves you frefhened and bedewed ; Nor was it common gratitude That did your cares repay. ‘© When Spring came on with bud and bell, Among thefe rocks did I Before you hang my wreaths, to tell That gentle days were nigh ! And in the fultry Summer hours, I fheltered you with leaves and flowers ; THE WATERFALL AND THE EGLANTINE. 171 And in my leaves—now fhed and gone— The linnet lodged, and for us two Chaunted his pretty fongs, when you Had little voice, or none, “¢ But now proud thoughts are in your breaft— What grief is mine you fee. Ah! would you think, even yet, how bleft ‘Together we might be ! Though of both leaf and flower bereft, Some ornaments to me are left— Rich ftore of fcarlet hips is mine, With which I, in my humble way, Would deck you many a Winter’s day, A happy Eglantine !”’ What more he faid I cannot tell, The Torrent thundered down the dell With unabating hatte ; I liftened, nor aught elfe could hear ; The Briar quaked—and much I fear Thofe accents were his laft. POEMS ON FLOWERS. THE OAK AND THE BROOM. A PASTORAL. His fimple truths did Andrew glean Befide the babbling rills; A careful ftudent he had been Among the woods and hills. One Winter’s night, when through the trees The wind was thundering, on his knees His youngeft born did Andrew hold : And while the reft, a ruddy quire, Were feated round their blazing fire, This tale the fhepherd told :— “ ; # we + . % * » * ~ . eet ‘ ra a # .- eta | %. *._} ¢ A ; | cs"! o : | et * » @ ~~ gerty CENTER c,.4 our Engl “LIBRARY 1868 wo2 ish lakes, mountains, 4 i word Cre BKS h, William, ony nd waterf . . ~ *, - at ; : ; - ex : - i | ' ne . * 3 : eae ' 1 4 os ’ : > a - +48 - »% > - - 7 ‘ : | cd .. ¥ f ¥ - > Ax, ' aT —t ne aes ' - ~ & “ Po 7 - ~% * : _.* * “24, * 4 ° a. : , Tq, . 7 ‘ , ahs Fe - vy 4 > . - * ~ .! 5 mn id " ; - y , og s “yh . ™ ei aw . oe a * 2 > - i> 4 ¥ ‘ “= hail ? 2 c +, - : : ‘ e . + ‘ @ = . Ps ¥ ‘ a * ‘ f" 7? wt : ‘ . { t by + am ee ? 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