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- Title: Poems Chiefly From Manuscript
- Author: John Clare
- Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8672]
- [This file was first posted on July 31, 2003]
- Edition: 10
- Language: English
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- *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, POEMS CHIEFLY FROM MANUSCRIPT ***
- Produced by Jon Ingram, Marc D'Hooghe and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team
- [Illustration: JOHN CLARE.
- _Engraved by E. Scriven, from a Painting by W. Hilton, R.A._]
- POEMS CHIEFLY FROM MANUSCRIPT by JOHN CLARE
- * * * * *
- NOTE
- For the present volume over two thousand poems by Clare have been
- considered and compared; of which over two-thirds have not been
- published. Of those here given ninety are now first printed, and are
- distinguished with asterisks in the contents: one or two are gleaned
- from periodicals: and many of the others have been brought into line
- with manuscript versions. While poetic value has been the general
- ground of selection, the development of the poet has seemed of
- sufficient interest for representation; and some of Clare's juvenilia
- are accordingly included. The arrangement is chronological, though
- in many cases the date of a poem can only be conjectured from the
- handwriting and the style; and it is almost impossible to affix dates
- to such Asylum Poems as bear none.
- Punctuation and orthography have been attempted; Clare left such
- matters to his editor in his lifetime, conceiving them to be an
- "awkward squad." In some poems stanzas have been omitted, particularly
- in the case of first drafts which demand revision; but in others
- stanzas dropped by previous editors have been restored. Titles have
- been given to many poems which, doubtless, in copies not available to
- us were better christened by Clare himself. So regularly does Clare
- use such forms as "oer," "eer," and the like that he seems to have
- regarded them not as abbreviations but as originals, and they are
- given without apostrophe. The text of the Asylum Poems which has been
- used is a transcript, and one or two difficult passages are probably
- the fault of the copyist.
- For permission to examine and copy many of the poems preserved in the
- Peterborough Museum, and to have photographs taken, we are indebted
- to J. W. Bodger, Esq., the President for 1919-1920; without whose
- co-operation and interest the volume would have been a very different
- matter. Valuable help, too, has been given by Mr. Samuel Loveman of
- Cleveland, Ohio, who has placed at our disposal his collection of
- Clare MSS. To G. C. Druce, Esq., of Oxford, whose pamphlet on Clare's
- knowledge of flowers cannot but delight the lover of Clare: to the
- Rev. S. G. Short of Maxey, and formerly of Northborough: to J.
- Middleton Murry, Esq., the Editor of the _Athenaeum_: to Edward
- Liveing, Esq., and E. G. Clayton, Esq.: and to Norman Gale, Esq., who
- has not wavered from his early faith in Clare, our gratitude is gladly
- given for assistance and sympathy.
- And to Mr. Samuel Sefton of Derby, the grandson of Clare and one of
- his closest investigators, who has patiently and carefully responded
- to all our queries in a long correspondence, and who, besides
- informing us of the Clare tradition as it exists in the family, has
- supplied many materials of importance in writing the poet's life,
- special thanks are due. It was a fortunate chance that put us in
- communication with him.
- EDMUND BLUNDEN
- ALAN PORTER
- INTRODUCTION
- And he repulséd, (a short tale to make),
- Fell into a sadness; then into a fast;
- Thence to a watch; thence into a weakness;
- Thence to a lightness; and by this declension,
- Into the madness wherein now he raves.
- BIOGRAPHICAL
- The life of John Clare, offering as it does so much opportunity for
- sensational contrast and unbridled distortion, became at one time
- (like the tragedy of Chatterton) a favourite with the quillmen. Even
- his serious biographers have made excessive use of light and darkness,
- poetry and poverty, genius and stupidity: that there should be some
- uncertainty about dates and incidents is no great matter, but that
- misrepresentations of character or of habit should be made is the
- fault of shallow research or worse. We have been informed, for
- instance, that drink was a main factor in Clare's mental collapse;
- that Clare "pottered in the fields feebly"; that on his income of
- "£45 a year ... Clare thought he could live without working"; and all
- biographers have tallied in the melodramatic legend; "Neither wife
- nor children ever came to see him, except the youngest son, who came
- once," during his Asylum days. To these attractive exaggerations there
- are the best of grounds for giving the lie.
- John Clare was born on the 13th of July, 1793, in a small cottage
- degraded in popular tradition to a mud hut of the parish of Helpston,
- between Peterborough and Stamford. This cottage is standing to-day,
- almost as it was when Clare lived there; so that those who care to do
- so may examine Martin's description of "a narrow wretched hut, more
- like a prison than a human dwelling," in face of the facts. Clare's
- father, a labourer named Parker Clare, was a man with his wits about
- him, whether educated or not; and Ann his wife is recorded to have
- been a woman of much natural ability and precise habits, who thought
- the world of her son John. Of the other children, little is known but
- that there were two who died young and one girl who was alive in 1824.
- Clare himself wrote a sonnet in the _London Magazine_ for June, 1821,
- "To a Twin Sister, Who Died in Infancy."
- Parker Clare, a man with some reputation as a wrestler and chosen for
- thrashing corn on account of his strength, sometimes shared the fate
- of almost all farm labourers of his day and was compelled to accept
- parish relief: at no time can he have been many shillings to the good:
- but it was his determination to have John educated to the best of his
- power. John Clare therefore attended a dame-school until he was seven;
- thence, he is believed to have gone to a day-school, where he
- made progress enough to receive on leaving the warm praise of the
- schoolmaster, and the advice to continue at a nightschool--which he
- did. His aim, he notes later on, was to write copperplate: but there
- are evidences that he learned much more than penmanship. Out of school
- he appears to have been a happy, imaginative child: as alert for mild
- mischief as the rest of the village boys, but with something solitary
- and romantic in his disposition. One day indeed at a very early age he
- went off to find the horizon; and a little later while he tended sheep
- and cows in his holiday-time on Helpston Common, he made friends with
- a curious old lady called Granny Bains, who taught him old songs and
- ballads. Such poems as "Childhood" and "Remembrances" prove that
- Clare's early life was not mere drudgery and despair. "I never had
- much relish for the pastimes of youth. Instead of going out on the
- green at the town end on winter Sundays to play football I stuck to
- my corner stool poring over a book; in fact, I grew so fond of being
- alone at last that my mother was fain to force me into company, for
- the neighbours had assured her mind ... that I was no better than
- crazy.... I used to be very fond of fishing, and of a Sunday morning
- I have been out before the sun delving for worms in some old
- weed-blanketed dunghill and steering off across the wet grain ... till
- I came to the flood-washed meadow stream.... And then the year used
- to be crowned with its holidays as thick as the boughs on a harvest
- home." It is probable that the heavy work which he is said to have
- done as a child was during the long holiday at harvesttime. When he
- was twelve or thirteen he certainly became team-leader, and in this
- employment he saw a farm labourer fall from the top of his loaded
- wagon and break his neck. For a time his reason seemed affected by the
- sight.
- At evening-school, Clare struck up a friendship with an excise-man's
- son, to the benefit of both. In 1835, one of many sonnets was addressed
- to this excellent soul:
- Turnill, we toiled together all the day,
- And lived like hermits from the boys at play;
- We read and walked together round the fields,
- Not for the beauty that the journey yields--
- But muddied fish, and bragged oer what we caught,
- And talked about the few old books we bought.
- Though low in price you knew their value well,
- And I thought nothing could their worth excel;
- And then we talked of what we wished to buy,
- And knowledge always kept our pockets dry.
- We went the nearest ways, and hummed a song,
- And snatched the pea pods as we went along,
- And often stooped for hunger on the way
- To eat the sour grass in the meadow hay.
- One of these "few old books" was Thomson's "Seasons", which gave
- a direction to the poetic instincts of Clare, already manifesting
- themselves in scribbled verses in his exercise-books.
- Read, mark, learn as Clare might, no opportunity came for him to enter
- a profession. "After I had done with going to school it was proposed
- that I should be bound apprentice to a shoemaker, but I rather
- disliked this bondage. I whimpered and turned a sullen eye on every
- persuasion, till they gave me my will. A neighbour then offered to
- learn me his trade--to be a stone mason,--but I disliked this too....
- I was then sent for to drive the plough at Woodcroft Castle of Oliver
- Cromwell memory; though Mrs. Bellairs the mistress was a kind-hearted
- woman, and though the place was a very good one for living, my mind
- was set against it from the first;... one of the disagreeable things
- was getting up so early in the morning ... and another was getting
- wetshod ... every morning and night--for in wet weather the moat used
- to overflow the cause-way that led to the porch, and as there was but
- one way to the house we were obliged to wade up to the knees to get
- in and out.... I staid here one month, and then on coming home to my
- parents they could not persuade me to return. They now gave up all
- hopes of doing any good with me and fancied that I should make nothing
- but a soldier; but luckily in this dilemma a next-door neighbour at
- the Blue Bell, Francis Gregory, wanted me to drive plough, and as I
- suited him, he made proposals to hire me for a year--which as it had
- my consent my parents readily agreed to." There he spent a year in
- light work with plenty of leisure for his books and his long reveries
- in lonely favourite places. His imagination grew intensely, and in his
- weekly errand to a flour-mill at Maxey ghosts rose out of a swamp and
- harried him till he dropped. This stage was hardly ended when one
- day on his road he saw a young girl named Mary Joyce, with whom he
- instantly fell in love. This crisis occurred when Clare was almost
- sixteen: the fate of John Clare hung in the balance for six months.
- Then Mary's father, disturbed principally by the chance that his
- daughter might be seen talking to this erratic youngster, put an end
- to their meetings. From this time, with intervals of tranquillity,
- Clare was to suffer the slow torture of remorse, until at length
- deliberately yielding himself up to his amazing imagination he held
- conversation with Mary, John Clare's Mary, his first wife Mary--as
- though she had not lived unwed, and had not been in her grave for
- years.
- But this was not yet; and we must return to the boy Clare, now
- terminating his year's hiring at the Blue Bell. It was time for him
- to take up some trade in good earnest; accordingly, in an evil hour
- disguised as a fortunate one, he was apprenticed to the head gardener
- at Burghley Park. The head gardener was in practice a sot and a
- slave-driver. After much drunken wild bravado, not remarkable in the
- lad Clare considering his companions and traditions, there came the
- impulse to escape; with the result that Clare and a companion were
- shortly afterwards working in a nursery garden at Newark-upon-Trent.
- Both the nursery garden and "the silver Trent" are met again in the
- poems composed in his asylum days; but for the time being they meant
- little to him, and he suddenly departed through the snow. Arrived home
- at Helpston, he lost some time in finding farm work and in writing
- verses: sharing a loft at night with a fellow-labourer, he would rise
- at all hours to note down new ideas. It was not unnatural in the
- fellow-labourer to request him to "go and do his poeting elsewhere."
- Clare was already producing work of value, none the less. Nothing
- could be kept from his neighbours, who looked askance on his ways of
- thinking, and writing: while a candid friend to whom he showed his
- manuscripts directed his notice to the study of grammar. Troubled
- by these ill omens, he comforted himself in the often intoxicated
- friendship of the bad men of the village, who under the mellowing
- influences of old ale roared applause as he recited his ballads. This
- life was soon interrupted.
- "When the country was chin-deep," Clare tells us, "in the fears of
- invasion, and every mouth was filled with the terror which Buonaparte
- had spread in other countries, a national scheme was set on foot to
- raise a raw army of volunteers: and to make the matter plausible a
- letter was circulated said to be written by the Prince Regent. I
- forget how many were demanded from our parish, but remember the panic
- which it created was very great. No great name rises in the world
- without creating a crowd of little mimics that glitter in borrowed
- rays; and no great lie was ever yet put in circulation without a herd
- of little lies multiplying by instinct, as it were and crowding under
- its wings. The papers that were circulated assured the people of
- England that the French were on the eve of invading it and that it
- was deemed necessary by the Regent that an army from eighteen to
- forty-five should be raised immediately. This was the great lie, and
- then the little lies were soon at its heels; which assured the people
- of Helpston that the French had invaded and got to London. And some of
- these little lies had the impudence to swear that the French had even
- reached Northampton. The people were at their doors in the evening to
- talk over the rebellion of '45 when the rebels reached Derby, and
- even listened at intervals to fancy they heard the French rebels at
- Northampton, knocking it down with their cannon. I never gave much
- credit to popular stories of any sort, so I felt no concern at these
- stories; though I could not say much for my valour if the tale had
- proved true. We had a crossgrained sort of choice left us, which was
- to be found, to be drawn, and go for nothing--or take on as volunteers
- for the bounty of two guineas. I accepted the latter and went with
- a neighbour's son, W. Clarke, to Peterborough to be sworn on and
- prepared to join the regiment at Oundle. The morning we left home our
- mothers parted with us as if we were going to Botany Bay, and people
- got at their doors to bid us farewell and greet us with a Job's
- comfort 'that they doubted we should see Helpston no more.' I confess
- I wished myself out of the matter. When we got to Oundle, the place
- of quartering, we were drawn out into the field, and a more motley
- multitude of lawless fellows was never seen in Oundle before--and
- hardly out of it. There were 1,300 of us. We were drawn up into a line
- and sorted out into companies. I was one of the shortest and therefore
- my station is evident. I was in that mixed multitude called the
- battalion, which they nicknamed 'bum-tools' for what reason I cannot
- tell; the light company was called 'light-bobs,' and the grenadiers
- 'bacon-bolters' ... who felt as great an enmity against each other as
- ever they all felt against the French."
- In 1813 he read among other things the "Eikon Basilike," and turned
- his hand to odd jobs as they presented themselves. His life appears to
- have been comfortable and a little dull for a year or two; flirtation,
- verse-making, ambitions and his violin took their turns amiably
- enough! At length he went to work in a lime-kiln several miles from
- Helpston, and wrote only less poems than he read: one day in the
- autumn of 1817, he was dreaming yet new verses when he first saw
- "Patty," his wife-to-be. She was then eighteen years old, and modestly
- beautiful; for a moment Clare forgot Mary Joyce, and though "the
- courtship ultimately took a more prosaic turn," there is no denying
- the fact that he was in love with "Patty" Turner, the daughter of the
- small farmer who held Walkherd Lodge. In the case of Clare, poetry was
- more than ever as time went on autobiography; and it is noteworthy
- that among the many love lyrics addressed to Mary Joyce there are not
- wanting affectionate tributes to his faithful wife Patty.
- Maid of Walkherd, meet again,
- By the wilding in the glen....
- And I would go to Patty's cot
- And Patty came to me;
- Each knew the other's very thought
- Under the hawthorn tree....
- And I'll be true for Patty's sake
- And she'll be true for mine;
- And I this little ballad make,
- To be her valentine.
- Not long after seeing Patty, Clare was informed by the owner of the
- lime-kiln that his wages would now be seven shillings a week, instead
- of nine. He therefore left this master and found similar work in the
- village of Pickworth, where being presented with a shoemaker's bill
- for £3, he entered into negotiations with a Market Deeping bookseller
- regarding "Proposals for publishing by subscription a Collection of
- Original Trifles on Miscellaneous Subjects, Religious and Moral, in
- verse, by John Clare, of Helpstone." Three hundred proposals were
- printed, with a specimen sonnet well chosen to intrigue the religious
- and moral; and yet the tale of intending subscribers stood adamantly
- at seven. On the face of it, then, Clare had lost one pound; had worn
- himself out with distributing his prospectuses; and further had been
- discharged from the lime-kiln for doing so in working hours. His
- ambitions, indeed, set all employers and acquaintances against him;
- and he found himself at the age of twenty-five compelled to ask for
- parish relief. In this extremity, even the idea of enlisting once
- more crossed his brain; then, that of travelling to Yorkshire for
- employment: and at last, the prospectus which had done him so much
- damage turned benefactor. With a few friends Clare was drinking
- success to his goose-chase when there appeared two "real gentlemen"
- from Stamford. One of these, a bookseller named Drury, had chanced
- on the prospectus, and wished to see more of Clare's poetry. Soon
- afterwards, he promised to publish a selection, with corrections; and
- communicated with his relative, John Taylor, who with his partner
- Hessey managed the well-known publishing business in Fleet Street.
- While this new prospect was opening upon Clare, he succeeded in
- obtaining work once more, near the home of Patty; their love-making
- proceeded, despite the usual thunderstorms, and the dangerous rivalry
- of a certain dark lady named Betty Sell. The bookseller Drury, though
- his appearance was in such critical days timely for Clare, was not a
- paragon of virtue. Without Clare's knowing it, he acquired the legal
- copyright of the poems, probably by the expedient of dispensing money
- at convenient times--a specious philanthropy, as will be shown. At the
- same time he allowed Clare to open a book account, which proved
- at length to be no special advantage. And further, with striking
- astuteness, he found constant difficulty in returning originals. In a
- note written some ten years later, Clare regrets that "Ned Drury has
- got my early vol. of MSS. I lent it him at first, but like all my
- other MSS. elsewhere I could never get it again.... He has copies
- of all my MSS. except those written for the 'Shepherd's Calendar.'"
- Nevertheless, through Drury, Clare was enabled to meet his publisher
- Taylor and his influential friend of the _Quarterly_, Octavius
- Gilchrist, before the end of 1819.
- By 1818, there is no doubt, Clare had read very deeply, and even had
- some idea of the classical authors through translations. It is certain
- that he knew the great English writers, probable that he possessed
- their works. What appears to be a list of books which he was anxious
- to sell in his hardest times includes some curious titles, with some
- familiar ones. There are Cobb's Poems, Fawke's Poems, Broom's, Mrs.
- Hoole's, and so on; there are also Cowley's Works--Folio, Warton's
- "Milton," Waller, and a Life of Chatterton; nor can he have been
- devoid of miscellaneous learning after the perusal of Watson's
- "Electricity," Aristotle's Works, Gasse's "Voyages," "Nature
- Display'd," and the _European Magazine_ ("fine heads and plates"). His
- handwriting at this time was bold and hasty; his opinions, to judge
- from his uncompromising notes to Drury respecting the text of the
- poems, almost cynical and decidedly his own. Tact was essential if you
- would patronize Clare: you might broaden his opinions, but you dared
- not assail them. Thus the friendly Gilchrist, a high churchman, hardly
- set eyes on Clare before condemning Clare's esteem for a dissenting
- minister, a Mr. Holland, who understood the poet and the poetry: it
- was some time before Gilchrist set eyes on Clare again.
- The year 1820 found Clare unemployed once more, but the said Mr.
- Holland arrived before long with great news. "In the beginning of
- January," Clare briefly puts it, "my poems were published after a long
- anxiety of nearly two years and all the Reviews, except Phillips'
- waste paper magazine, spoke in my favour." Most assuredly they did.
- The literary world, gaping for drouth, had seen an announcement, then
- an account of "John Clare, an agricultural labourer and poet," during
- the previous autumn; the little cloud, no bigger than a man's hand, in
- a little while seemed to usurp the whole sky--or in other terms, three
- editions of "Poems Descriptiveof Rural Life and Scenery" were sold
- between January 16 and the last of March. While this fever was raging
- among the London coteries, critical, fashionable, intellectual, even
- the country folk round Helpston came to the conclusion that Clare was
- something of a phenomenon. "In the course of the publication," says
- Clare, "I had ventured to write to Lord Milton to request leave that
- the volume might be dedicated to him; but his Lordship was starting
- into Italy and forgot to answer it. So it was dedicated to nobody,
- which perhaps might be as well. As soon as it was out, my mother took
- one to Milton; when his Lordship sent a note to tell me to bring ten
- more copies. On the following Sunday I went, and after sitting
- awhile in the servants' hall (where I could eat or drink nothing
- for thought), his Lordship sent for me, and instantly explained the
- reasons why he did not answer my letter, in a quiet unaffected manner
- which set me at rest. He told me he had heard of my poems by Parson
- Mossop (of Helpston), who I have since heard took hold of every
- opportunity to speak against my success or poetical abilities before
- the book was published, and then, when it came out and others praised
- it, instantly turned round to my side. Lady Milton also asked
- me several questions, and wished me to name any book that was a
- favourite; expressing at the same time a desire to give me one. But I
- was confounded and could think of nothing. So I lost the present.
- In fact, I did not like to pick out a book for fear of seeming
- over-reaching on her kindness, or else Shakespeare was at my tongue's
- end. Lord Fitzwilliam, and Lady Fitzwilliam too, talked to me and
- noticed me kindly, and his Lordship gave me some advice which I had
- done well perhaps to have noticed better than I have. He bade me
- beware of booksellers and warned me not to be fed with promises. On my
- departure they gave me a handful of money--the most that I had ever
- possessed in my life together. I almost felt I should be poor no
- more--there was £17." Such is Clare's description of an incident which
- has been rendered in terms of insult. Other invitations followed, the
- chief practical result being an annuity of fifteen pounds promised by
- the Marquis of Exeter. Men of rank and talent wrote letters to Clare,
- or sent him books: some found their way to Helpston, and others sent
- tracts to show him the way to heaven. And now at last Clare was well
- enough off to marry Patty, before the birth of their first child, Anna
- Maria.
- Before his marriage, probably, Clare was desired to spend a few days
- with his publisher Taylor in London. In smock and gaiters he felt most
- uncertain of himself and borrowed a large overcoat from Taylor to
- disguise his dress: over and above this question of externals, he
- instinctively revolted against being exhibited. Meeting Lord Radstock,
- sometime admiral in the Royal Navy, at dinner in Taylor's house, Clare
- gained a generous if somewhat religiose friend, with the instant
- result that he found himself "trotting from one drawing-room to the
- other." He endured this with patience, thinking possibly of the cat
- killed by kindness; and incidentally Radstock introduced him to the
- strangely superficial-genuine lady Mrs. Emmerson, who was to be a
- faithful, thoughtful friend to his family for many years to come. In
- another direction, soon after Clare's return to Helpston, the retired
- admiral did him a great service, opening a private subscription list
- for his benefit: it was found possible to purchase "£250 Navy 5 Per
- Cents" on the 28th April and a further "£125 Navy 5 Per Cents" a month
- or so later. This stock, held by trustees, yielded Clare a dividend of
- £18 15s. at first, but in 1823 this income dwindled to £15 15s.; and
- by 1832 appears to have fallen to £13 10s. To the varying amount thus
- derived, and to the £15 given yearly by the Marquis of Exeter,
- a Stamford doctor named Bell--one of Clare's most energetic
- admirers--succeeded in adding another annuity of £10 settled upon the
- poet by Lord Spencer. But in the consideration of these bounties, it
- is just to examine the actual financial effect of Clare's first book.
- The publishers' own account, furnished only through Clare's repeated
- demands in 1829 or thereabouts, has a sobering tale to tell: but so
- far no biographer has condescended to examine it.
- On the first edition Clare got nothing. Against him is entered the
- item "Cash paid Mr. Clare for copyright p. Mr. Drury ... £20"; but
- this money if actually paid had been paid in 1819. Against him also is
- charged a curious "Commission 5 p. Cent... £8 12s.," while Drury and
- Taylor acknowledge sharing profits of £26 odd.
- On the second and third editions Clare got nothing; but to his account
- is charged the £100 which Taylor and Hessey "subscribed" to his fund.
- "Commission," "Advertising," "Sundries," and "Deductions allowed to
- Agents," account for a further £51 of the receipts: and Drury and
- Taylor ostensibly take over £30 apiece.
- The fourth edition not being exhausted, the account is not closed: but
- "Advertising" has already swollen to £30, and there is no sign that
- Clare benefits a penny piece. Small wonder that at the foot of these
- figures he has written, "How can this be? I never sold the poems
- for any price--what money I had of Drury was given me on account of
- profits to be received--but here it seems I have got nothing and
- am brought in minus twenty pounds of which I never received a
- sixpence--or it seems that by the sale of these four thousand copies
- I have lost that much--and Drury told me that 5,000 copies had been
- printed tho' 4,000 only are accounted for." Had Clare noticed further
- an arithmetical discrepancy which apparently shortened his credit
- balance by some £27, he might have been still more sceptical.
- Not being overweighted, therefore, with instant wealth, Clare returned
- to Helpston determined to continue his work in the fields. But fame
- opposed him: all sorts and conditions of Lydia Whites, Leo Hunters,
- Stigginses, and Jingles crowded to the cottage, demanding to see the
- Northamptonshire Peasant, and often wasting hours of his time. One
- day, for example, "the inmates of a whole boarding-school, located at
- Stamford, visited the unhappy poet"; and even more congenial visitors
- who cheerfully hurried him off to the tavern parlour were the ruin of
- his work. Yet he persevered, writing his poems only in his leisure,
- until the harvest of 1820 was done; then in order to keep his word
- with Taylor, who had agreed to produce a new volume in the spring
- of 1821, he spent six months in the most energetic literary labour.
- Writing several poems a day as he roamed the field or sat in Lea
- Close Oak, he would sit till late in the night sifting, recasting and
- transcribing. His library, by his own enterprise and by presents from
- many friends, was greatly enlarged, and he already knew not only the
- literature of the past, but also that of the present. In his letters
- to Taylor are mentioned his appreciations of Keats, "Poor Keats, you
- know how I reverence him," Shelley, Hunt, Lamb--and almost every
- other contemporary classic. Nor was he afraid to criticize Scott with
- freedom in a letter to Scott's friend Sherwell: remarking also that
- Wordworth's Sonnet on Westminster Bridge had no equal in the language,
- but disagreeing with "his affected godliness."
- Taylor and Hessey for their part did not seem over-anxious to produce
- the new volume of poems, perhaps because Clare would not allow any
- change except in the jots and tittles of his work, perhaps thinking
- that the public had had a surfeit of sensation. At length in the
- autumn of 1821 the "Village Minstrel" made its appearance, in
- two volumes costing twelve shillings; with the bait of steel
- engravings,--the first, an unusually fine likeness of Clare from
- the painting by Hilton; the second, an imaginative study of Clare's
- cottage, not without representation of the Blue Bell, the village
- cross and the church. The book was reviewed less noisily, and a sale
- of a mere 800 copies in two months was regarded as "a very modified
- success." Meanwhile, Clare was writing for the _London Magazine_, and
- Cherry tells us that "as he contributed almost regularly for some
- time, a substantial addition was made to his income." Clare tells us,
- in a note on a cash account dated 1827, "In this cash account there
- is nothing allowed me for my three years' writing for the _London
- Magazine_. I was to have £12 a year."
- To insist in the financial affairs of Clare may seem blatant, or
- otiose: actually, the treatment which he underwent was a leading
- influence in his career. He was grateful enough to Radstock for
- raising a subscription fund; he may have been grateful to Taylor
- and Hessey for subscribing £100 of his own money; but what hurt and
- embittered him was to see this sum and the others invested for him
- under trustees. Indeed, what man would not, if possessed of any
- independence of mind, strongly oppose such namby-pamby methods? It is
- possible to take a more sinister view of Taylor and Hessey and their
- reluctance ever to provide Clare with a statement of account; but in
- the matter of Clare's funded property folly alone need be considered.
- In October 1821, notably, Clare saw an excellent opportunity for the
- future of his family. A small freehold of six or seven acres with a
- pleasant cottage named Bachelor's Hall, where Clare had spent many an
- evening in comfort and even in revelry, was mortgaged to a Jew for
- two hundred pounds; the tenants offered Clare the whole property on
- condition that he paid off the mortgage. Small holdings were rare in
- that district of great landowners, and this to Clare was the chance
- of a lifetime. He applied therefore to Lord Radstock for two hundred
- pounds from his funded property; Radstock replied that "the funded
- property was vested in trustees who were restricted to paying the
- interest to him." It would have been, thought Clare, no difficult
- matter for Radstock to have advanced me that small amount; and he
- rightly concluded that his own strength of character and common sense
- were distrusted by his patrons. Not overwhelmed by this, he now
- applied to his publisher Taylor, offering to sell his whole literary
- output for five years at the price of two hundred pounds. Taylor was
- not enthusiastic. These writings, he urged, might be worth more, or
- might be worth less; in the first case Clare, in the second himself
- would lose on the affair; besides, there were money-lenders and legal
- niceties to beware of; let not Clare "be ambitious but remain in the
- state in which God had placed him." Thus the miserable officiousness
- went on, and if Clare for a time found some comfort in the glass who
- can blame him? In his own words, "for enemies he cared nothing, from
- his friends he had much to fear." He was "thrown back among all the
- cold apathy of killing kindness that had numbed him ... for years."
- In May, 1822, Clare spent a brief holiday in London, meeting there the
- strong men of the _London Magazine_, Lamb, Hood, and therest. From
- his clothes, the _London_ group called him The Green Man; Lamb took a
- singular interest in him, and was wont to address him as "Clarissimus"
- and "Princely Clare." Another most enthusiastic acquaintance was a
- painter named Rippingille, who had begun life as the son of a farmer
- at King's Lynn, and who was now thoroughly capable of taking Clare
- into the most Bohemian corners of London. Suddenly, however, news came
- from Helpston recalling the poet from these perambulations, and he
- returned in haste, to find his second daughter born, Eliza Louisa,
- god-child of Mrs. Emmerson and Lord Radstock.
- At this time, Clare appears to have been writing ballads of a truly
- rustic sort, perhaps in the light of his universal title, The
- Northamptonshire Peasant Poet. He would now, moreover, collect such
- old ballads and songs as his father and mother or those who worked
- with him might chance to sing; but was often disappointed to find that
- "those who knew fragments seemed ashamed to acknowledge it ... and
- those who were proud of their knowledge in such things knew nothing
- but the senseless balderdash that is brawled over and sung at country
- feasts, statutes, and fairs, where the most senseless jargon passes
- for the greatest excellence, and rudest indecency for the finest wit."
- None the less he recovered sufficient material to train himself into
- the manner of these "old and beautiful recollections." But whatever
- he might write or edit, he was unlikely to find publishers willing
- to bring out. The "Village Minstrel" had barely passed the first
- thousand, and the "second edition" was not melting away. Literature
- after all was not money, and to increase Clare's anxiety and dilemma
- came illness. In the early months of 1823, he made a journey to
- Stamford to ask the help of his old friend Gilchrist.
- Gilchrist was already in the throes of his last sickness, and Clare
- took his leave without a word of his own difficulties. Arriving home,
- he fell into a worse illness than before; but as the spring came on he
- rallied, and occasionally walked to Stamford to call on his friend,
- who likewise seemed beginning to mend. On the 30th of June, Clare was
- received with the news "Mr. Gilchrist is dead." Clare relapsed into a
- curious condition which appeared likely to overthrow his life or his
- reason when Taylor most fortunately came to see him, and procured him
- the best doctor in Peterborough. This doctor not only baffled
- Clare's disease, but, rousing attention wherever he could in the
- neighbourhood, was able to provide him with good food and even some
- old port from the cellar of the Bishop of Peterborough.
- At last on the advice of the good doctor and the renewed invitation of
- Taylor, Clare made a third pilgrimage to London, and this time stayed
- from the beginning of May till the middle of July, 1824. Passing the
- first three weeks in peaceful contemplation of London crowds, he
- was well enough then to attend a _London Magazine_ dinner, where De
- Quincey swam into his ken, and the next week a similar gathering where
- Coleridge talked for three hours. Clare sat next to Charles Elton and
- gained a staunch friend, who shortly afterwards sent him a letter
- in verse with a request that he should sit to Rippingille for his
- portrait:
- His touch will, hue by hue, combine
- Thy thoughtful eyes, that steady shine,
- The temples of Shakesperian line,
- The quiet smile.
- To J. H. Reynolds he seemed "a very quiet and worthy yet enthusiastic
- man." George Darley, too, was impressed by Clare the man, and for some
- time was to be one of the few serious critics of Clare the poet. Allan
- Cunningham showed a like sympathy and a still more active interest.
- A less familiar character, the journalist Henry Van Dyk, perhaps did
- Clare more practical good than either.
- With these good effects of Clare's third visit to town, another may be
- noted. A certain Dr. Darling attended him throughout, and persuaded
- him to give up drink; this he did. The real trouble at Helpston was to
- discover employment, for already Clare was supporting his wife, his
- father and mother, and three young children. Farmers were unwilling
- to employ Clare, indeed insulted him if he applied to them: and his
- reticence perhaps lost him situations in the gardens of the Marquis of
- Exeter, and then of the Earl Fitzwilliam.
- In spite of disappointments, he wrote almost without pause, sometimes
- making poems in the manner of elder poets (with the intention of mild
- literary forgery), sometimes writing in his normal vein for the lately
- announced "New Shepherd's Calendar"; and almost daily preparing two
- series of articles, on natural history and on British birds. A curious
- proof of the facility with which he wrote verse is afforded by the
- great number of rhymed descriptions of birds, their nests and eggs
- which this period produced: as though he sat down resolved to write
- prose notes and found his facts running into metre even against his
- will. As if not yet embroiled in schemes enough, Clare planned and
- began a burlesque novel, an autobiography, and other prose papers:
- while he kept a diary which should have been published. Clare had
- been forced into a literary career, and no one ever worked more
- conscientiously or more bravely. Those who had at first urged him to
- write can scarcely be acquitted of desertion now: but the more and the
- better Clare wrote, the less grew the actual prospect of production,
- success and independence.
- On the 9th of March, 1825, Clare wrote in his diary: "I had a very odd
- dream last night, and take it as an ill omen ... I thought I had one
- of the proofs of the new poems from London, and after looking at it
- awhile it shrank through my hands like sand, and crumbled into dust."
- Three days afterwards, the proof of the "Shepherd's Calendar" arrived
- at Helpston. The ill omen was to be proved true, but not yet. Clare
- continued to write and to botanize, and being already half-forgotten
- by his earlier friends was contented with the company of two notable
- local men, Edward Artis the archaeologist who discovered ancient
- Durobrivae, and Henderson who assisted Clare in his nature-work. These
- two pleasant companions were in the service of Earl Fitzwilliam. It
- was perhaps through their interest that Clare weathered the hardships
- of 1825 so well; and equally, although the "Shepherd's Calendar"
- seemed suspended, did Clare's old patron Radstock endeavour to keep
- his spirits up, writing repeatedly to the publisher in regard to
- Clare's account. The hope of a business agreement was destroyed by the
- sudden death of Radstock, "the best friend," says Clare, "I have met
- with."
- Not long after this misfortune, Clare returned to field work for the
- period of harvest, then through the winter concentrated his energy on
- his poetry. Nor was poetry his only production, for through his friend
- Van Dyk he was enabled to contribute prose pieces to the London press.
- In June, 1826, his fourth child was born, and Clare entreated Taylor
- to bring out the "Shepherd's Calendar," feeling that he might at least
- receive money enough for the comfort of his wife and his baby; but
- Taylor felt otherwise, recommending Clare to write for the annuals
- which now began to flourish. This Clare at last persuaded himself to
- do. Payment was tardy, and in some cases imaginary; and for the time
- being the annuals were not the solution of his perplexities. He
- therefore went back to the land; and borrowing the small means
- required rented at length a few acres, with but poor results.
- The publication of Clare's first book had been managed with excellent
- strategy; Taylor had left nothing to chance, and the public responded
- as he had planned. The independence of Clare may have displeased
- the publisher; at any rate, his enthusiasm dwindled, and further to
- jeopardize Clare's chances it occurred that in 1825 Taylor and Hessey
- came to an end, the partners separating. Omens were indeed bad for
- the "Shepherd's Calendar" which, two years after its announcement,
- in June, 1827, made its unobtrusive appearance. There were very few
- reviews, and the book sold hardly at all. Yet this was conspicuously
- finer work than Clare had done before. Even "that beautiful
- frontispiece of De Wint's," as Taylor wrote, did not attract
- attention. The forgotten poet, slaving at his small-holding, found
- that his dream had come true. Meanwhile Allan Cunningham had been
- inquiring into this non-success, and early in 1828 wrote to Clare
- urging him to come to London and interview the publisher. An
- invitation from Mrs. Emmerson made thevisit possible. Once more then
- did Clare present himself at 20, Stratford Place, and find his "sky
- chamber" ready to receive him. Nor did he allow long time to elapse
- before finding out Allan Cunningham, who heartily approved of his plan
- to call on Taylor, telling him to request a full statement of account.
- The next day, when Clare was on the point of making the demand, Taylor
- led across the trail with an unexpected offer; recommending Clare to
- buy the remaining copies of his "Shepherd's Calendar" from him at
- half-a-crown each, that he might sell them in his own district.
- Clare asked time to reflect. A week later, against the wish of Allan
- Cunningham, he accepted the scheme.
- Clare had had another object in coming to town. Dr. Darling had done
- him so much good on a previous occasion that he wished to consult him
- anew. On the 25th of February, 1828, Clare wrote to his wife: "Mr.
- Emmerson's doctor, a Mr. Ward, told me last night that there was
- little or nothing the matter with me--and yet I got no sleep the
- whole of last night." Already, it appears, had coldness and dilemma
- unsettled him. That they had not subdued him, and that his home life
- was in the main happy and affectionate, and of as great an importance
- to him as any of his aspirations, is to be judged from his poems
- and his letters of 1828 and thereabouts. They show him as the very
- opposite of the feeble neurotic who has so often been beworded under
- his name:
- 20, STRATFORD PLACE, _March 21st, 1828._
- MY DEAR PATTY,
- I have been so long silent that I feel ashamed of it, but I have been
- so much engaged that I really have not had time to write; and the
- occasion of my writing now is only to tell you that I shall be at home
- next week for certain.--I am anxious to see you and the children
- and I sincerely hope you are all well. I have bought the dear little
- creatures four books, and Henry Behnes has promised to send Frederick
- a wagon and horses as a box of music is not to be had. The books I
- have bought them are "Puss-in-Boots," "Cinderella," "Little Rhymes,"
- and "The Old Woman and Pig"; tell them that the pictures are all
- coloured, and they must make up their minds to chuse which they like
- best ere I come home.--Mrs. Emmerson desires to be kindly remembered
- to you, and intends sending the children some toys. I hope next
- Wednesday night at furthest will see me in my old corner once again
- amongst you. I have made up my mind to buy Baxter "The History of
- Greece," which I hope will suit him. I have been poorly, having caught
- cold, and have been to Dr. Darling. I would have sent you some money
- which I know you want, but as I am coming home so soon I thought it
- much safer to bring it home myself than send it; and as this is only
- to let you know that I am coming home, I shall not write further than
- hoping you are all well--kiss the dear children for me all round--give
- my remembrances to all--and believe me, my dear Patty,
- Yours most affectionately,
- JOHN CLARE.
- During this stay in London, Clare had had proofs that his poems
- were not completely overlooked. Strangers, recognizing him from the
- portrait in the "Village Minstrel," often addressed him in the street.
- In this way he first met Alaric A. Watts, and Henry Behnes, the
- sculptor, who induced Clare to sit to him. The result was a strong,
- intensely faithful bust (preserved now in the Northampton Free
- Library). Hilton, who had painted Clare in water-colours and in oils,
- celebrated with Behnes and Clare the modelling of this bust, all three
- avoiding a dinner of lions arranged by Mrs. Emmerson. On another
- occasion, Clare found a congenial spirit in William Hone.
- But now Clare is home at Helpston, ready with a sack of poetry to
- tramp from house to house and try his luck. Sometimes he dragged
- himself thirty miles a day, meeting rectors who "held it unbecoming
- to see poems hawked about": one day, having walked seven milesinto
- Peterborough, and having sold no books anywhere, he trudged home
- to find Patty in the pains of labour; and now had to go back to
- Peterborough as fast as he might for a doctor. Now there were nine
- living beings dependent on Clare. At length he altered his plan of
- campaign, and advertised that his poems could be had at his cottage,
- with some success. About this time Clare was invited to write for "The
- Spirit of the Age," and still he supplied brief pieces to the hated
- but unavoidable annuals. Letters too from several towns in East
- Anglia, summoning John Clare with his bag of books, at least promised
- him some slight revenue; actually he only went to one of these places,
- namely Boston, where the mayor gave a banquet in his honour, and
- enabled him to sell several volumes--autographed. Among the younger
- men, a similar feast was proposed; but Clare declined, afterwards
- reproaching himself bitterly on discovering that they had hidden ten
- pounds in his wallet. On his return home not only himself but the rest
- of the family in turn fell ill with fever, so that the spring of 1829
- found Clare out of work and faced with heavy doctor's-bills.
- Intellectually, John Clare was in 1828 and 1829 probably at his
- zenith. He had ceased long since to play the poetic ploughman; he had
- gained in his verses something more ardent and stirring than he had
- shown in the "Shepherd's Calendar"; and the long fight (for it was
- nothing less) against leading-strings and obstruction now began to
- manifest itself in poems of regret and of soliloquy. Having long
- written for others' pleasure, he now wrote for his own nature.
- I would not wish the burning blaze
- Of fame around a restless world,
- The thunder and the storm of praise
- In crowded tumults heard and hurled.
- There had been few periods of mental repose since 1820. His brain and
- his poetic genius, by this long discipline and fashioning, were now
- triumphant together. The declension from this high estate might have
- been more abrupt but for the change in his fortunes. He had again
- with gentleness demanded his accounts from his publisher, and when in
- August, 1829, these accounts actually arrived, disputed several points
- and gained certain concessions: payment was made from the editors of
- annuals; and with these reliefs came the chance for him to rent a
- small farm and to work on the land of Earl Fitzwilliam. His working
- hours were long, and his mind was forced to be idle. This salutary
- state of affairs lasted through 1830, until happiness seemed the only
- possibility before him. What poems he wrote occurred suddenly and
- simply to him. His children--now six in number--were growing up in
- more comfort and in more prospect than he had ever enjoyed. But he
- reckoned not with illness.
- In short, illness reduced Clare almost to skin-and-bone. Farming not
- only added nothing but made encroachment on his small stipend. In
- despair he flung himself into field labour again, and was carried home
- nearly dead with fever. Friends there were not wanting to send food
- and medicine; Parson Mossop, having long ago been converted to Clare,
- did much for him. Even so the landlord distrained for rent, and Clare
- applied to his old friend Henderson the botanist at Milton Park. Lord
- Milton came by and Clare was encouraged to tell him his trouble;
- his intense phrases and bearing were such that the nobleman at once
- promised him a new cottage and a plot of ground. At the same time, he
- expressed his hope that there would soon be another volume of poems
- by John Clare. This hope was the spark which fired a dangerous train,
- perhaps; for Clare once again fell into his exhausting habit of poetry
- all the day and every day. He decided to publish a new volume by
- subscription.
- The new cottage was in the well-orcharded village of Northborough,
- three miles from Helpston. It was indeed luxurious in comparison with
- the old stooping house where Clare had spent nearly forty years, but
- there was more in that old house than mere stone and timber. Clare
- began to look on the coming change with terror; delayed the move day
- after day, to the distress of poor Patty; and when at last news came
- from Milton Park that the Earl was not content with such strange
- hesitation, and when Patty had her household on the line of march, he
- "followed in the rear, walking mechanically, with eyes half shut, as
- if in a dream." There was no delay in his self-expression.
- I've left mine own old home of homes,
- Green fields and every pleasant place;
- The summer like a stranger comes;
- I pause and hardly know her face.
- I miss the hazel's happy green,
- The bluebell's quiet hanging blooms,
- Where envy's sneer was never seen,
- Where staring malice never comes.
- This and many other verses, not the least pathetic in our language,
- were written by John Clare on June 20th, 1832, on the occasion of his
- moving out of a small and crowded cottage in a village street to
- a roomy, romantic farmhouse standing in its own grounds. Was this
- ingratitude? ask rather, is the dyer's hand subdued to what it works
- in?
- Clare rapidly proceeded with his new collection of poems, destined
- never to appear in his lifetime. In a thick oblong blank-book, divided
- into four sections to receive Tales in Verse, Poems, Ballads and
- Songs, and Sonnets, he copied his best work in a hand small but
- clear, and with a rare freedom from slips of the pen. His proposals,
- reprinted with a warm-hearted comment in the _Athenaeum_ of 1832, were
- in these terms:
- The proposals for publishing these fugitives being addressed to
- friends no further apology is necessary than the plain statement of
- facts. Necessity is said to be the mother of invention, but there
- is very little need of invention for truth; and the truth is, that
- difficulty has grown up like a tree of the forest, and being no longer
- able to conceal it, I meet it in the best way possible by attempting
- to publish them for my own benefit and that of a numerous and
- increasing family. It were false delicacy to make an idle parade
- of independence in my situation, and it would be unmanly to make
- a troublesome appeal to favours, public or private, like a public
- petitioner. Friends neither expect this from me, or wish me to do it
- to others, though it is partly owing to such advice that I was induced
- to come forward with these proposals, and if they are successful
- they will render me a benefit, and if not they will not cancel any
- obligations that I may have received from friends, public and
- private, to whom my best wishes are due, and having said this much in
- furtherance of my intentions, I will conclude by explaining them.
- Proposals for publishing in 1 volume, F.c. 8vo, The Midsummer Cushion,
- or Cottage Poems, by John Clare.
- 1st. The Book will be printed on fine paper, and published as soon as
- a sufficient number of subscribers are procured to defray the expense
- of publishing.
- 2nd. It will consist of a number of fugitive trifles, some of which
- have appeared in different periodicals, and of others that have never
- been published.
- 3rd. No money is requested until the volume shall be delivered, free
- of expense, to every subscriber.
- 4th. The price will not exceed seven shillings and sixpence, and it
- may not be so much, as the number of pages and the expense of the book
- will be regulated by the Publisher.
- In his new home Clare was for a time troubled with visitors; to most
- he was aloof, but sometimes he spoke freely of his affairs. One
- visitor who found him in the communicative mood chanced to be the
- editor of a magazine, _The Alfred._ The denials of Clare, frankly
- given to rumours of his new benefits (variously estimated between two
- hundred and a thousand a year), were to this gentleman as meat and
- drink; and _The Alfred_ for October the 5th, 1832, contained a violent
- manifesto condemning publishers and patrons in the most fiery fashion
- and apparently inspired by the poet himself. This did his cause much
- damage, and Clare wrote to the perpetrator in anger: "There never
- was a more scandalous insult to my feelings than this officious
- misstatement.... I am no beggar; for my income is £36, and though
- I have had no final settlement with Taylor, I expect to have
- one directly." Clare ended by demanding a recantation. None was
- forthcoming, and the effect on patrons and poet was unfortunate
- indeed. Yet still he could write of himself in this uncoloured style:
- "I am ready to laugh with you at my own vanity. For I sit sometimes
- and wonder over the little noise I have made in the world, until I
- think I have written nothing yet to deserve any praise at all. So
- the spirit of fame, of living a little after life like a noise on a
- conspicuous place, urges my blood upward into unconscious melodies;
- and striding down my orchard and homestead I hum and sing inwardly
- these little madrigals, and then go in and pen them down, thinking
- them much better things than they are--until I look over them again.
- And then the charm vanishes into the vanity that I shall do something
- better ere I die; and so, in spite of myself, I rhyme on and write
- nothing but little things at last."
- With the gear that Mrs. Emmerson's kindness and activity had provided,
- Clare kept his garden and ground in order; yet the winter of 1832 was
- a time of great hardship and foreboding. His youngest son Charles was
- born on the 4th of January, 1833; the event shook Clare's nerve more
- terribly perhaps than anything before had done and he went out
- into the fields. Late in the day his daughter Anna found him lying
- unconscious, and for a month he had to keep his bed. As if to prove
- the proverb "It never rains but it pours," subscribers to his new
- volume hung back, and when spring had come they numbered in all
- forty-nine. Clare submitted the work to the publishers, great and
- small, but the best offer that he got depended on his providing in
- advance £100 for the necessary steel engravings. And now Clare lost
- all his delight in lonely walks, but sitting in his study wrote
- curious paraphrases of "the Psalms, the Proverbs, and the Book of
- Job." His manner towards those round him became apathetic and silent.
- Even the news brought by his doctor--who prescribed Clare to his other
- patients--that subscribers now were more than two hundred, seemed to
- sound meaningless in his ears. But even these danger-signs seemed
- discounted by the self-command and cheerfulness which Clare soon
- afterwards regained; and ashamed of his misjudgment, Dr. Smith came to
- the conclusion that he need visit Clare no more. An attack of insanity
- immediately followed, during which Clare did not know his wife, his
- children or himself.
- From this heavy trance he awoke, bitterly aware of his peril. He wrote
- at once to Taylor, again and again. "You must excuse my writing; but I
- feel that if I do not write now I shall not be able. What I wish is to
- get under Dr. Darling's advice, or to have his advice to go somewhere;
- for I have not been from home this twelve-month, and cannot get
- anywhere." ... "If I could but go to London, I think I should get
- better. How would you advise me to come? I dare not come up by myself.
- Do you think one of my children might go with me?... Thank God my wife
- and children are all well." Taylor wrote once in mildly sympathetic
- words, but probably thought that Clare was making much ado about
- nothing. And here at least was the opportunity for a patron to save a
- poet from death-in-life for five pounds. Nothing was done, and Clare
- sat in his study, writing more and more paraphrases of the Old
- Testament, together with series of sonnets of a grotesque, rustic
- sort, not resembling any other poems in our language.
- The "Midsummer Cushion" had been set aside, but Clare had submitted
- many of the poems together with hundreds more to Messrs. Whittaker.
- Largely through the recommendations of Mr. Emmerson, the publishers
- decided to print a volume from these, picking principally those poems
- which had already shown themselves respectable by appearing in the
- annuals. One even written in 1820, "The Autumn Robin," was somehow
- chosen, to the exclusion of such later poems as "Remembrances"
- and "The Fallen Elm." With faults like these, the selection was
- nevertheless a distinctly beautiful book of verse. In March, 1834,
- Clare definitely received forty pounds for the copyright, and finally
- in July, 1835, appeared this his last book, "The Rural Muse." Its
- success was half-hearted, in spite of a magnificent eulogy by
- Christopher North in _Blackwood's_, and of downright welcome by the
- _Athenaeum_, the _New Monthly_ and other good judges. There was a slow
- sale for several months, but for Clare there was little chance of new
- remuneration. This he could regard calmly, for while the book was in
- the press he had received from the Literary Fund a present of fifty
- pounds.
- Clare's malady slowly increased. The exact history of this decline is
- almost lost, yet we may well believe that the death of his mother on
- the 18th of December, 1835, was a day of double blackness for him.
- The winter over, Patty made a great fight for his reason, and at last
- persuaded him to go out for walks, which checked the decline. Now he
- became so passionately fond of being out-of-doors that "he could not
- be made to stop a single day at home." In one of these roving walks he
- met his old friend Mrs. Marsh, the wife of the Bishop of Peterborough.
- A few nights later as her guest he sat in the Peterborough theatre
- watching the "Merchant of Venice." So vivid was his imagination--for
- doubtless the strolling players were not in themselves convincing--that
- he at last began to shout at Shylock and try to attack him on the stage.
- When Clare returned to Helpston, the change in him terrified his wife.
- And yet, he rallied and walked the fields, and sitting on the window-seat
- taught his sons to trim the two yew-trees in his garden into old-fashioned
- circles and cones. The positive signs of derangement which he had given so
- far were not after all conclusive. He had seen Mary Joyce pass by, he had
- spoken to her, occasionally he as a third person had watched and discussed
- the doings of John Clare and this lost sweetheart. He had surprised one or
- two people by calling mole-hills mountains. One day, too, at Parson
- Mossop's house he had suddenly pointed to figures moving up and down.
- Under these circumstances, a Market Deeping doctor named Skrimshaw
- certified him mad; and on similar grounds almost any one in the world
- might be clapped into an asylum.
- Hallucinations ceased for a few months, but Mrs. Clare had difficulty
- in keeping outside interference at bay. Earl Fitzwilliam, in his
- position of landlord, proposed to send the man who called mole-hills
- mountains at once to the Northampton Asylum. When the summer came,
- unfortunately, Clare's mind seemed suddenly to give way, and
- preparations were being made for his admission to the county Asylum
- when letters came from Taylor and other old friends in London,
- proposing to place him in private hands. Clare was taken accordingly
- on the 16th of July, 1837, to Fair Mead House, Highbeach, in Epping
- Forest.
- Dr. Allen, the mild broad-minded founder of this excellent asylum, had
- few doubts as to the condition of Clare's mind, and assured him an
- eventual recovery. As with the fifty other patients, so he dealt with
- Clare: keeping him away from books, and making him work in the garden
- and the fields. Poetry, it is said, was made impossible for him, paper
- being taken away from him; but it is not conceivable that Clare could
- live apart from this kindest of companions for many months together.
- Soon he was allowed to go out into the forest at his will, often
- taking his new acquaintance Thomas Campbell, the son of the poet,
- on these wood-rambles. His hallucinations do not appear to have
- diminished, although they changed. He was now convinced that Mary
- Joyce was his true wife--Patty was his "second wife." He had known
- William Shakespeare, and many other great ones in person. Why such men
- as Wordsworth, Campbell and Byron were allowed to steal John Clare's
- best poems and to publish them as their own, he could not imagine.
- John Clare was not only noble by nature but by blood also.--On such
- rumoured eccentricities did the popular notion of his madness rest. It
- would seem that anything he said was taken down in evidence against
- him. How dared he be figurative?
- On the other hand, Miss Mitford records figurative conversations not
- so easily explained; his eye-witness's account of the execution of
- Charles the First, "the most graphic and minute, with an accuracy as
- to costume and manners far exceeding what would probably have been at
- his command if sane," and his seaman's narrative of the battle of
- the Nile and the death of Nelson in exact nautical detail. These
- imaginations she compares to clairvoyance. Cyrus Redding, who left
- three accounts of his visit, found him "no longer, as he was formerly,
- attenuated and pale of complexion ... a little man, of muscular frame
- and firmly set, his complexion fresh and forehead high, a nose
- somewhat aquiline, and long full chin." "His manner was perfectly
- unembarrassed, his language correct and fluent; he appeared to possess
- great candour and openness of mind, and much of the temperament of
- genius. There was about his manner no tincture of rusticity." Once
- only during the conversation did Clare betray any aberration, abruptly
- introducing and abandoning the topic of Prize-fighting, as though "a
- note had got into a piece of music which had no business there."
- Clare told Redding that he missed his wife and his home, the society
- of women, and books. At last, having been in the private asylum four
- years, he "returned home out of Essex" on foot, leaving Epping Forest
- early on July 20, 1841, and dragging himself along almost without
- pause until July 23. Of this amazing journey he himself wrote an
- account for "Mary Clare," which is printed in full in Martin's "Life":
- it is both in style and in subject an extraordinary document. The
- first night, he says, "I lay down with my head towards the north, to
- show myself the steering-point in the morning." On "the third day I
- satisfied my hunger by eating the grass on the roadside which seemed
- to taste something like bread. I was hungry and eat heartily till I
- was satisfied; in fact, the meal seemed to do me good." And "there was
- little to notice, for the road very often looked as stupid as myself."
- At last between Peterborough and Helpston "a cart met me, with a man,
- a woman and a boy in it. When nearing me the woman jumped out, and
- caught fast hold of my hands, and wished me to get into the cart. But
- I refused; I thought her either drunk or mad. But when I was told it
- was my second wife, Patty, I got in, and was soon at Northborough."
- Rest and home somewhat restored Clare's mind, and it was Patty's hope
- and aim to keep him in his cottage. Though she attempted to keep paper
- from him he contrived to write verse paraphrases of the prophetical
- books, sometimes putting in between a song to Mary or a stanza of
- nature poetry. At the end of August, round the edges of a local
- newspaper he wrote the draft of a letter to Dr. Allen, of Highbeach,
- which in the almost complete absence of documents for this period is
- an important expression:
- MY DEAR SIR,
- Having left the Forest in a hurry I had not time to take my leave of
- you and your family, but I intended to write, and that before now. But
- dullness and disappointment prevented me, for I found your words true
- on my return here, having neither friends nor home left. But as it is
- called the "Poet's Cottage" I claimed a lodging in it where I now am.
- One of my fancies I found here with her family and all well. They met
- me on this side Werrington with a horse and cart, and found me all but
- knocked up, for I had travelled from Essex to Northamptonshire without
- ever eating or drinking all the way--save one pennyworth of beer which
- was given me by a farm servant near an odd house called "The Plough."
- One day I eat grass to keep on my [feet], but on the last day I chewed
- tobacco and never felt hungry afterwards.
- Where my poetical fancy is I cannot say, for the people in the
- neighbourhood tell me that the one called "Mary" has been dead these
- eight years: but I can be miserably happy in any situation and any
- place and could have staid in yours on the Forest if any of my friends
- had noticed me or come to see me. But the greatest annoyance in such
- places as yours are those servants styled keepers, who often assumed
- as much authority over me as if I had been their prisoner; and not
- liking to quarrel I put up with it till I was weary of the place
- altogether. So I heard the voice of freedom, and started, and could
- have travelled to York with a penny loaf and a pint of beer; for I
- should not have been fagged in body, only one of my old shoes had
- nearly lost the sole before I started, and let in the water and silt
- the first day, and made me crippled and lame to the end of my journey.
- I had eleven books sent me from How & Parsons, Booksellers--some lent
- and some given me; out of the eleven I only brought 5 vols. here, and
- as I don't want any part of Essex in Northamptonshire agen I wish you
- would have the kindness to send a servant to get them for me. I should
- be very thankful--not that I care about the books altogether, only it
- may be an excuse to see me and get me into company that I do not want
- to be acquainted with--one of your labourers', Pratt's, wife borrowed
- [ ] of Lord Byron's--and Mrs. Fish's daughter has two or three more,
- all Lord Byron's poems; and Mrs. King late of The Owl Public House
- Leppit Hill, and now of Endfield Highway, has two or three--all Lord
- Byron's, and one is the "Hours of Idleness."
- You told me something before haytime about the Queen allowing me
- a yearly salary of £100, and that the first quarter had then
- commenced--or else I dreamed so. If I have the mistake is not of much
- consequence to any one save myself, and if true I wish you would get
- the quarter for me (if due), as I want to be independent and pay
- for board and lodging while I remain here. I look upon myself as a
- widow[er] or bachelor, I don't know which. I care nothing about the
- women now, for they are faithless and deceitful; and the first woman,
- when there was no man but her husband, found out means to cuckold him
- by the aid and assistance of the devil--but women being more righteous
- now, and men more plentiful, they have found out a more godly way to
- do it without the devil's assistance. And the man who possesses a
- woman possesses losses without gain. The worst is the road to ruin,
- and the best is nothing like a good Cow. Man I never did like--and
- woman has long sickened me. I should like to be to myself a few years
- and lead the life of a hermit: but even there I should wish for her
- whom I am always thinking of--and almost every song I write has some
- sighs and wishes in ink about Mary. If I have not made your head weary
- by reading thus far I have tired my own by writing it; so I will bid
- you goodbye, and am
- My dear doctor
- Yours very sincerely
- JOHN CLARE
- Give my best respects to Mrs. Allen and Miss Allen, and to Dr.
- Stedman; also to Campbell, and Hayward, and Howard at Leopard's Hill,
- or in fact to any one who may think it worth while to enquire about
- me.
- Patty worked her hardest to keep Clare out of future asylums, but
- it seems that her wishes were overridden. Dr. Allen let it be known
- through the _Gentleman's Magazine_ and other publications that Clare
- would in the ordinary way almost certainly recover: but the local
- doctors knew better. On the authority of an anonymous "patron" the
- doctor Skrimshaw who had previously found Clare insane now paid
- him another visit, and with a certain William Page, also of Market
- Deeping, condemned him to be shut up "After years addicted to poetical
- prosings."
- Then one day keepers came, and a vain struggle, and the Northborough
- cottage saw John Clare no more. He was now in the asylum at
- Northampton, and the minds of Northamptonshire noblemen need no longer
- be troubled that a poet was wandering in miserable happiness under
- their park walls.
- So far, the madness of Clare had been rather an exaltation of mind
- than a collapse. Forsaken mainly by his friends--even Mrs. Emmerson's
- letters ceased in 1837,--unrecognized by the new generation of writers
- and of readers, hated by his neighbours, wasted with hopeless love,
- he had encouraged a life of imagination and ideals. Imagination
- overpowered him, until his perception of realities failed him.
- He could see Mary Joyce or talk with her, he had a family of
- dream-children by her: but if this was madness, there was method in
- it. But now the blow fell, imprisonment for life: down went John Clare
- into idiocy, "the ludicrous with the terrible." And even from this
- desperate abyss he rose.
- Earl Fitzwilliam paid for Clare's maintenance in the Northampton
- Asylum, but at the ordinary rate for poor people. The asylum
- authorities at least seemed to have recognized Clare as a man out
- of the common, treating him as a "gentleman patient," and allowing
- him--for the first twelve years--to go when he wished into
- Northampton, where he would sit under the portico of All Saints'
- Church in meditation. What dreams were these! "sometimes his face
- would brighten up as if illuminated by an inward sun, overwhelming
- in its glory and beauty." Sane intervals came, in which he wrote his
- poems; and these poems were of a serenity and richness not surpassed
- in his earlier work, including for instance "Graves of Infants" (May,
- 1844), "The Sleep of Spring" (1844), "Invitation to Eternity" (1848)
- and "Clock-a-Clay" (before 1854). But little news of him went farther
- afield than the town of Northampton, and the poems remained in
- manuscript. A glimpse of Clare in these years is left us by a Mr.
- Jesse Hall, who as an admirer of his poems called on him in May, 1848.
- "As it was a very fine day, he said we could go and have a walk in the
- grounds of the institution. We discussed many subjects and I found him
- very rational, there being very little evidence of derangement.... I
- asked permission for him to come to my hotel the next day. We spent
- a few hours together. I was very sorry to find a great change in him
- from the previous day, and I had ample evidence of his reason being
- dethroned, his conversation being disconnected and many of his remarks
- displaying imbecility: but at times he spoke rationally and to the
- point." To Hall as to almost every other casual visitor Clare gave
- several manuscript poems.
- A letter to his wife, dated July 19th, 1848, gives fresh insight into
- his condition:
- MY DEAR WIFE,
- I have not written to you a long while, but here I am in the land of
- Sodom where all the people's brains are turned the wrong way. I was
- glad to see John yesterday, and should like to have gone back with
- him, for I am very weary of being here. You might come and fetch me
- away, for I think I have been here long enough.
- I write this in a green meadow by the side of the river agen Stokes
- Mill, and I see three of their daughters and a son now and then. The
- confusion and roar of mill dams and locks is sounding very pleasant
- while I write it, and it's a very beautiful evening; the meadows are
- greener than usual after the shower and the rivers are brimful. I
- think it is about two years since I was first sent up in this Hell
- and French Bastille of English liberty. Keep yourselves happy and
- comfortable and love one another. By and bye I shall be with you,
- perhaps before you expect me. There has been a great storm here
- with thunder and hail that did much damage to the glass in the
- neighbourhood. Hailstones the size of hens' eggs fell in some places.
- Did your brother John come to Northborough or go to Barnack? His uncle
- John Riddle came the next morning but did not stay. I thought I was
- coming home but I got cheated. I see many of your little brothers and
- sisters at Northampton, weary and dirty with hard work; some of them
- with red hands, but all in ruddy good health: some of them are along
- with your sister Ruth Dakken who went from Helpston a little girl.
- Give my love to your Mother, Grandfather and Sisters, and believe me,
- my dear children, hers and yours,
- Very affectionately
- JOHN CLARE
- Life went on with little incident for Clare in the asylum. To amuse
- himself he read and wrote continually; in 1850 his portrait was
- painted, and his death reported. In 1854 he assisted Miss Baker in her
- "Glossary of Northamptonshire Words and Phrases," providing her with
- all his asylum manuscripts and specially contributing some verses on
- May-day customs. At this time an edition of his poems was projected,
- and the idea met with much interest among those who yet remembered
- Clare: but it faded and was gone. The "harmless lunatic" was at length
- confined to the asylum grounds, and to the distresses of his mind
- began to be added those of the ageing body. Hope even now was not
- dead, and a poor versifier but good Samaritan who saw him in 1857
- printed some lines in the _London Journal_ for November 2lst asking
- the aid of Heaven to restore Clare to his home and his poetry (for he
- seems to have written little at that time); a gentleman who was in a
- position to judge wrote also that in the spring of 1860 his mind was
- calmer than it had been for years, and that he was induced to write
- verses once more. But Clare was sixty-seven years old; it was perhaps
- too late to release him, and perhaps he had grown past the desire of
- liberty. On the 7th of March he wrote to Patty, asking after all his
- children and some of his friends, and sending his love to his father
- and mother (so long since dead); signing himself "Your loving husband
- till death, John Clare." On the 8th he wrote a note to Mr. Hopkins:
- "Why I am shut up I don't know." And on the 9th he answered his "dear
- Daughter Sophia's letter," saying that he was "not quite so well to
- write" as he had been, and (presumably in reply to some offer of books
- or comforts) "I want nothing from Home to come here. I shall be glad
- to see you when you come." In the course of 1860 he was photographed,
- and that the Northampton folk still took an interest in their poet is
- proved by the sale of these likenesses; copies could be seen in the
- shops until recent years. But that Clare might have been set at large
- seems not to have occurred to those who in curiosity purchased his
- portrait. A visitor named John Plummer went to the asylum in 1861, and
- found Clare reading in the window recess of a very comfortable room.
- "Time had dealt kindly with him," he wrote. "It was in vain that we
- strove to arrest his attention: he merely looked at us with a vacant
- gaze for a moment, and then went on reading his book." This was
- possibly rather the action of sanity than of insanity. Yet Plummer did
- his best, in _Once a Week_ and elsewhere, to call attention to
- the forgotten poet, who was visited soon afterwards by the worthy
- Nonconformist Paxton Hood, and presently by Joseph Whitaker, the
- publisher of the "Almanack."
- Clare became patriarchal in appearance; and his powers failed more
- rapidly, until he could walk no longer. A wheel-chair was procured for
- him, that he might still enjoy the garden and the open air. On Good
- Friday in 1864 he was taken out for the last time; afterwards he could
- not be moved, yet he would still manage to reach his window-seat; then
- came paralysis, and on the afternoon of May the 20th, 1864,
- His soul seemed with the free,
- He died so quietly.
- His last years had been spent in some degree of happiness, and
- from officials and fellow-patients he had received gentleness, and
- sympathy, and even homage. It has been said, not once nor twice but
- many times, that in the asylum he was never visited by his wife, nor
- by any of his children except the youngest son, Charles, who came
- once. That any one should condemn Patty for her absence is surely
- presumptuous in the extreme: she was now keeping her home together
- with the greatest difficulty, nor can it be known what deeper motives
- influenced relationships between wife and husband, even if the name of
- Mary Joyce meant nothing. That the children came to see their father
- whenever they could, the letters given above signify: but, if the
- opportunities were not many, there were the strongest of reasons.
- Frederick died in 1843, just after Clare's incarceration: Anna in the
- year following: Charles the youngest, a boy of great promise, in 1852:
- and Sophia in 1863. William, and John who went to Wales, went when
- occasion came and when they could afford the expense of the journey:
- Eliza, who survived last of Clare's children and who most of all
- understood him and his poetry, was unable through illness to leave her
- home for many years, yet she went once to see him. The isolation which
- found its expression in "I Am" was another matter: it was the sense of
- futility, of not having fulfilled his mission, of total eclipse
- that spoke there. N. P. Willis, perhaps the Howitts, and a few more
- worthies came for brief hours to see Clare, rather as a phenomenon
- than as a poet; but Clare, who had sat with Elia and his assembled
- host, who had held his own with the finest brains of his time and had
- written such a cornucopia of genuine poetry now lying useless in his
- cottage at Northborough, cannot but have regarded the Northampton
- Asylum as "the shipwreck of his own esteems."
- Clare was buried on May 25th, 1864, where he had wished to be, in the
- churchyard at Helpston. The letter informing Mrs. Clare of his death
- was delivered at the wrong address, and did not eventually reach her
- at Northborough before Clare's coffin arrived at Helpston; scarcely
- giving her time to attend the funeral the next day. Indeed, had the
- sexton at Helpston been at home, the bearers would have urged him to
- arrange for the funeral at once; in his absence, they left the coffin
- in an inn parlour for the night, and a scandal was barely prevented.
- A curious superstition grew up locally that it was not Clare's body
- which was buried in that coffin: and among those who attended the last
- rite, not one but found it almost impossible to connect this episode
- with those days forty years before, when so many a notable man
- was seen making through Helpston village for the cottage of the
- eager-eyed, brilliant, unwearying young poet who was the talk of
- London. After such a long silence and oblivion, even the mention
- of John Clare's name in his native village awoke odd feelings of
- unreality.
- The poetry of John Clare, originally simple description of the country
- and countrymen, or ungainly imitation of the poetic tradition as he
- knew it through Allan Ramsay, Burns, and the popular writers of the
- eighteenth century, developed into a capacity for exact and complete
- nature-poetry and for self-expression. Thoroughly awake to all the
- finest influences in life and in literature, he devoted himself to
- poetry in every way. Imagination, colour, melody and affection were
- his by nature; where he lacked was in dramatic impulse and in passion,
- and sometimes his incredible facility in verse, which enabled him to
- complete poem after poem without pause or verbal difficulty, was not
- his best friend. He possesses a technique of his own; his rhymes are
- based on pronunciation, the Northamptonshire pronunciation to which
- his ear had been trained, and thus he accurately joins "stoop" and
- "up," or "horse" and "cross"--while his sonnets are free and often
- unique in form. In spite of his individual manner, there is no poet
- who in his nature-poetry so completely subdues self and mood and deals
- with the topic for its own sake. That he is by no means enslaved to
- nature-poetry, the variety of the poems in this selection must show.
- His Asylum Poems are distinct from most of the earlier work. They are
- often the expressions of his love tragedy, yet strange to say they
- are not often sad or bitter: imagination conquers, and the tragedy
- vanishes. They are rhythmically new, the movement having changed from
- that of quiet reflection to one of lyrical enthusiasm: even nature
- is now seen in brighter colours and sung in subtler music. Old age
- bringing ever intenser recollection and childlike vision found Clare
- writing the light lovely songs which bear no slightest sign of the
- cruel years. So near in these later poems are sorrow and joy that they
- awaken deeper feelings and instincts than almost any other lyrics
- can--emotions such as he shares with us in his "Adieu!":
- I left the little birds
- And sweet lowing of the herds,
- And couldn't find out words,
- Do you see,
- To say to them good-bye,
- Where the yellowcups do lie;
- So heaving a deep sigh,
- Took to sea....
- In this sort of pathos, so indefinable and intimate, William Blake and
- only he can be said to resemble him.
- B.
- CONTENTS
- NOTE
- INTRODUCTION
- BIOGRAPHICAL
- EARLY POEMS--
- *Ballad
- *Song
- Summer Evening
- What is Life
- *The Maid of Ocram, or Lord Gregory
- The Gipsy's Camp
- Impromptu
- The Wood-cutter's Night Song
- Rural Morning Song
- The Cross Roads; or, The Haymaker's Story
- In Hilly-Wood
- The Ants
- *To Anna Three Years Old
- *From "The Parish: A Satire"
- Nobody Cometh to Woo
- *Distant Hills
- MIDDLE PERIOD, 1824-1836--
- *The Stranger
- *Song's Eternity
- *The Old Cottagers
- *Young Lambs
- *Early Nightingale
- *Winter Walk
- *The Soldier
- *Ploughman Singing
- *Spring's Messengers
- *Letter in Verse
- *Snow Storm
- *Firwood
- *Grasshoppers
- *Field Path
- *Country Letter
- From "January"
- November
- *The Fens
- *Spear Thistle
- *Idle Fame
- *Approaching Night
- *Song
- Farewell and Defiance to Love
- To John Milton
- The Vanities of Life
- Death
- *The Fallen Elm
- *Sport in the Meadows
- *Death
- Autumn
- Summer Images
- A World for Love
- Love
- Nature's Hymn to the Deity
- Decay
- *The Cellar Door
- The Flitting
- Remembrances
- The Cottager
- Insects
- Sudden Shower
- Evening Primrose
- The Shepherd's Tree
- Wild Bees
- The Firetail's Nest
- The Fear of Flowers
- Summer Evening
- Emmonsail's Heath in Winter
- Pleasures of Fancy
- To Napoleon
- The Skylark
- The Flood
- The Thrush's Nest
- November Earth's Eternity
- *Autumn
- *Signs of Winter
- *Nightwind
- *Birds in Alarm
- *Dyke Side
- *Badger
- *The Fox
- *The Vixen
- *Turkeys
- *The Poet's
- Death
- The Beautiful Stranger
- *The Tramp
- *Farmer's Boy
- *Braggart
- *Sunday Dip
- *Merry Maid
- *Scandal
- *Quail's Nest
- *Market Day
- *Stonepit
- *"The Lass with the Delicate Air"
- *The Lout
- *Hodge
- *Farm Breakfast
- *Love and Solitude
- ASYLUM POEMS--
- *Gipsies
- *The Frightened Ploughman
- *Farewell The Old Year
- *The Yellowhammer
- *Autumn
- *Song
- *The Winter's Come
- *Summer Winds
- Bonnie Lassie O!
- *Meet Me in the Green Glen
- *Love Cannot Die
- *Peggy
- *The Crow Sat on the Willow
- *Now is Past
- *Song
- *First Love
- *Mary Bayfield
- *The Maid of Jerusalem
- *Song
- *Thou Flower of Summer
- *The Swallow
- *The Sailor-Boy
- The Sleep of Spring
- Mary Bateman
- Bonny Mary O!
- Where She Told Her Love
- Autumn
- *Invitation to Eternity
- *The Maple Tree
- *House or Window Flies
- *Dewdrops
- *Fragment
- *From "A Rhapsody"
- *Secret Love
- *Bantry Bay
- *Peggy's the Lady of the Hall
- *I Dreamt of Robin
- *The Peasant Poet
- *To John Clare
- *Early Spring
- Clock-a-Clay
- Little Trotty
- Wagtail
- Graves of Infants
- The Dying Child
- Love Lives Beyond the Tomb
- I AM
- APPENDICES--
- *Fragment: A Specimen of Clare's rough drafts A Bibliographical
- Outline
- Poems with asterisks are now first printed, or in one or two cases now
- first collected.
- EARLY POEMS
- _Ballad_
- A faithless shepherd courted me,
- He stole away my liberty.
- When my poor heart was strange to men,
- He came and smiled and stole it then.
- When my apron would hang low,
- Me he sought through frost and snow.
- When it puckered up with shame,
- And I sought him, he never came.
- When summer brought no fears to fright,
- He came to guard me every night.
- When winter nights did darkly prove,
- None came to guard me or to love.
- I wish, I wish, but all in vain,
- I wish I was a maid again.
- A maid again I cannot be,
- O when will green grass cover me?
- _Song_
- Mary, leave thy lowly cot
- When thy thickest jobs are done;
- When thy friends will miss thee not,
- Mary, to the pastures run.
- Where we met the other night
- Neath the bush upon the plain,
- Be it dark or be it light,
- Ye may guess we'll meet again.
- Should ye go or should ye not,
- Never shilly-shally, dear.
- Leave your work and leave your cot,
- Nothing need ye doubt or fear:
- Fools may tell ye lies in spite,
- Calling me a roving swain;
- Think what passed the other night--
- I'll be bound ye'll meet again.
- _Summer Evening_
- The sinking sun is taking leave,
- And sweetly gilds the edge of Eve,
- While huddling clouds of purple dye
- Gloomy hang the western sky.
- Crows crowd croaking over head,
- Hastening to the woods to bed.
- Cooing sits the lonely dove,
- Calling home her absent love.
- With "Kirchup! Kirchup!" mong the wheats
- Partridge distant partridge greets;
- Beckoning hints to those that roam,
- That guide the squandered covey home.
- Swallows check their winding flight,
- And twittering on the chimney light.
- Round the pond the martins flirt,
- Their snowy breasts bedaubed with dirt,
- While the mason, neath the slates,
- Each mortar-bearing bird awaits:
- By art untaught, each labouring spouse
- Curious daubs his hanging house.
- Bats flit by in hood and cowl;
- Through the barn-hole pops the owl;
- From the hedge, in drowsy hum,
- Heedless buzzing beetles bum,
- Haunting every bushy place,
- Flopping in the labourer's face.
- Now the snail hath made its ring;
- And the moth with snowy wing
- Circles round in winding whirls,
- Through sweet evening's sprinkled pearls,
- On each nodding rush besprent;
- Dancing on from bent to bent;
- Now to downy grasses clung,
- Resting for a while he's hung;
- Then, to ferry oer the stream,
- Vanishing as flies a dream;
- Playful still his hours to keep,
- Till his time has come to sleep;
- In tall grass, by fountain head,
- Weary then he drops to bed.
- From the hay-cock's moistened heaps,
- Startled frogs take vaunting leaps;
- And along the shaven mead,
- Jumping travellers, they proceed:
- Quick the dewy grass divides,
- Moistening sweet their speckled sides;
- From the grass or flowret's cup,
- Quick the dew-drop bounces up.
- Now the blue fog creeps along,
- And the bird's forgot his song:
- Flowers now sleep within their hoods;
- Daisies button into buds;
- From soiling dew the butter-cup
- Shuts his golden jewels up;
- And the rose and woodbine they
- Wait again the smiles of day.
- Neath the willow's wavy boughs,
- Dolly, singing, milks her cows;
- While the brook, as bubbling by,
- Joins in murmuring melody.
- Dick and Dob, with jostling joll,
- Homeward drag the rumbling roll;
- Whilom Ralph, for Doll to wait,
- Lolls him o'er the pasture gate.
- Swains to fold their sheep begin;
- Dogs loud barking drive them in.
- Hedgers now along the road
- Homeward bend beneath their load;
- And from the long furrowed seams,
- Ploughmen loose their weary teams:
- Ball, with urging lashes wealed,
- Still so slow to drive a-field,
- Eager blundering from the plough,
- Wants no whip to drive him now;
- At the stable-door he stands,
- Looking round for friendly hands
- To loose the door its fastening pin,
- And let him with his corn begin.
- Round the yard, a thousand ways,
- Beasts in expectation gaze,
- Catching at the loads of hay
- Passing fodderers tug away.
- Hogs with grumbling, deafening noise,
- Bother round the server boys;
- And, far and near, the motley group
- Anxious claim their suppering-up.
- From the rest, a blest release,
- Gabbling home, the quarreling geese
- Seek their warm straw-littered shed,
- And, waddling, prate away to bed.
- Nighted by unseen delay,
- Poking hens, that lose their way,
- On the hovel's rafters rise,
- Slumbering there, the fox's prize.
- Now the cat has ta'en her seat,
- With her tail curled round her feet;
- Patiently she sits to watch
- Sparrows fighting on the thatch.
- Now Doll brings the expected pails,
- And dogs begin to wag their tails;
- With strokes and pats they're welcomed in,
- And they with looking wants begin;
- Slove in the milk-pail brimming o'er,
- She pops their dish behind the door.
- Prone to mischief boys are met,
- Neath the eaves the ladder's set,
- Sly they climb in softest tread,
- To catch the sparrow on his bed;
- Massacred, O cruel pride!
- Dashed against the ladder's side.
- Curst barbarians! pass me by;
- Come not, Turks, my cottage nigh;
- Sure my sparrows are my own,
- Let ye then my birds alone.
- Come, poor birds, from foes severe
- Fearless come, you're welcome here;
- My heart yearns at fate like yours,
- A sparrow's life's as sweet as ours.
- Hardy clowns! grudge not the wheat
- Which hunger forces birds to eat:
- Your blinded eyes, worst foes to you,
- Can't see the good which sparrows do.
- Did not poor birds with watching rounds
- Pick up the insects from your grounds,
- Did they not tend your rising grain,
- You then might sow to reap in vain.
- Thus Providence, right understood,
- Whose end and aim is doing good,
- Sends nothing here without its use;
- Though ignorance loads it with abuse,
- And fools despise the blessing sent,
- And mock the Giver's good intent.--
- O God, let me what's good pursue,
- Let me the same to others do
- As I'd have others do to me,
- And learn at least humanity.
- Dark and darker glooms the sky;
- Sleep gins close the labourer's eye:
- Dobson leaves his greensward seat,
- Neighbours where they neighbours meet
- Crops to praise, and work in hand,
- And battles tell from foreign land.
- While his pipe is puffing out,
- Sue he's putting to the rout,
- Gossiping, who takes delight
- To shool her knitting out at night,
- And back-bite neighbours bout the town--
- Who's got new caps, and who a gown,
- And many a thing, her evil eye
- Can see they don't come honest by.
- Chattering at a neighbour's house,
- She hears call out her frowning spouse;
- Prepared to start, she soodles home,
- Her knitting twisting oer her thumb,
- As, both to leave, afraid to stay,
- She bawls her story all the way;
- The tale so fraught with 'ticing charms,
- Her apron folded oer her arms.
- She leaves the unfinished tale, in pain,
- To end as evening comes again:
- And in the cottage gangs with dread,
- To meet old Dobson's timely frown,
- Who grumbling sits, prepared for bed,
- While she stands chelping bout the town.
- The night-wind now, with sooty wings,
- In the cotter's chimney sings;
- Now, as stretching oer the bed,
- Soft I raise my drowsy head,
- Listening to the ushering charms,
- That shake the elm tree's mossy arms:
- Till sweet slumbers stronger creep,
- Deeper darkness stealing round,
- Then, as rocked, I sink to sleep,
- Mid the wild wind's lulling sound.
- _What is Life?_
- And what is Life?--An hour-glass on the run,
- A mist retreating from the morning sun,
- A busy, bustling, still repeated dream;
- Its length?--A minute's pause, a moment's thought;
- And happiness?-A bubble on the stream,
- That in the act of seizing shrinks to nought.
- What are vain Hopes?--The puffing gale of morn,
- That of its charms divests the dewy lawn,
- And robs each floweret of its gem,--and dies;
- A cobweb hiding disappointment's thorn,
- Which stings more keenly through the thin disguise.
- And thou, O Trouble?--Nothing can suppose,
- (And sure the power of wisdom only knows,)
- What need requireth thee:
- So free and liberal as thy bounty flows,
- Some necessary cause must surely be;
- But disappointments, pains, and every woe
- Devoted wretches feel,
- The universal plagues of life below,
- Are mysteries still neath Fate's unbroken seal.
- And what is Death? is still the cause unfound?
- That dark, mysterious name of horrid sound?
- A long and lingering sleep, the weary crave.
- And Peace? where can its happiness abound?--
- No where at all, save heaven, and the grave.
- Then what is Life?--When stripped of its disguise,
- A thing to be desired it cannot be;
- Since every thing that meets our foolish eyes
- Gives proof sufficient of its vanity.
- Tis but a trial all must undergo;
- To teach unthankful mortals how to prize
- That happiness vain man's denied to know,
- Until he's called to claim it in the skies.
- _The Maid Of Ocram or, Lord Gregory_
- Gay was the Maid of Ocram
- As lady eer might be
- Ere she did venture past a maid
- To love Lord Gregory.
- Fair was the Maid of Ocram
- And shining like the sun
- Ere her bower key was turned on two
- Where bride bed lay for none.
- And late at night she sought her love--
- The snow slept on her skin--
- Get up, she cried, thou false young man,
- And let thy true love in.
- And fain would he have loosed the key
- All for his true love's sake,
- But Lord Gregory then was fast asleep,
- His mother wide awake.
- And up she threw the window sash,
- And out her head put she:
- And who is that which knocks so late
- And taunts so loud to me?
- It is the Maid of Ocram,
- Your own heart's next akin;
- For so you've sworn, Lord Gregory,
- To come and let me in.
- O pause not thus, you know me well,
- Haste down my way to win.
- The wind disturbs my yellow locks,
- The snow sleeps on my skin.--
- If you be the Maid of Ocram,
- As much I doubt you be,
- Then tell me of three tokens
- That passed with you and me.--
- O talk not now of tokens
- Which you do wish to break;
- Chilled are those lips you've kissed so warm,
- And all too numbed to speak.
- You know when in my father's bower
- You left your cloak for mine,
- Though yours was nought but silver twist
- And mine the golden twine.--
- If you're the lass of Ocram,
- As I take you not to be,
- The second token you must tell
- Which past with you and me.--
- O know you not, O know you not
- Twas in my father's park,
- You led me out a mile too far
- And courted in the dark?
- When you did change your ring for mine
- My yielding heart to win,
- Though mine was of the beaten gold
- Yours but of burnished tin,
- Though mine was all true love without,
- Yours but false love within?
- O ask me no more tokens
- For fast the snow doth fall.
- Tis sad to strive and speak in vain,
- You mean to break them all.--
- If you are the Maid of Ocram,
- As I take you not to be,
- You must mention the third token
- That passed with you and me.--
- Twas when you stole my maidenhead;
- That grieves me worst of all.--
- Begone, you lying creature, then
- This instant from my hall,
- Or you and your vile baby
- Shall in the deep sea fall;
- For I have none on earth as yet
- That may me father call.--
- O must none close my dying feet,
- And must none close my hands,
- And may none bind my yellow locks
- As death for all demands?
- You need not use no force at all,
- Your hard heart breaks the vow;
- You've had your wish against my will
- And you shall have it now.
- And must none close my dying feet,
- And must none close my hands,
- And will none do the last kind deeds
- That death for all demands?--
- Your sister, she may close your feet,
- Your brother close your hands,
- Your mother, she may wrap your waist
- In death's fit wedding bands;
- Your father, he may tie your locks
- And lay you in the sands.--
- My sister, she will weep in vain,
- My brother ride and run,
- My mother, she will break her heart;
- And ere the rising sun
- My father will be looking out--
- But find me they will none.
- I go to lay my woes to rest,
- None shall know where I'm gone.
- God must be friend and father both,
- Lord Gregory will be none.--
- Lord Gregory started up from sleep
- And thought he heard a voice
- That screamed full dreadful in his ear,
- And once and twice and thrice.
- Lord Gregory to his mother called:
- O mother dear, said he,
- I've dreamt the Maid of Ocram
- Was floating on the sea.
- Lie still, my son, the mother said,
- Tis but a little space
- And half an hour has scarcely passed
- Since she did pass this place.--
- O cruel, cruel mother,
- When she did pass so nigh
- How could you let me sleep so sound
- Or let her wander bye?
- Now if she's lost my heart must break--
- I'll seek her till I die.
- He sought her east, he sought her west,
- He sought through park and plain;
- He sought her where she might have been
- But found her not again.
- I cannot curse thee, mother,
- Though thine's the blame, said he
- I cannot curse thee, mother,
- Though thou'st done worse to me.
- Yet do I curse thy pride that aye
- So tauntingly aspires;
- For my love was a gay knight's heir,
- And my father was a squire's.
- And I will sell my park and hall;
- And if ye wed again
- Ye shall not wed for titles twice
- That made ye once so vain.
- So if ye will wed, wed for love,
- As I was fain to do;
- Ye've gave to me a broken heart,
- And I'll give nought to you.
- Your pride has wronged your own heart's blood;
- For she was mine by grace,
- And now my lady love is gone
- None else shall take her place.
- I'll sell my park and sell my hall
- And sink my titles too.
- Your pride's done wrong enough as now
- To leave it more to do.
- She owneth none that owned them all
- And would have graced them well;
- None else shall take the right she missed
- Nor in my bosom dwell.--
- And then he took and burnt his will
- Before his mother's face,
- And tore his patents all in two,
- While tears fell down apace--
- But in his mother's haughty look
- Ye nought but frowns might trace.
- And then he sat him down to grieve,
- But could not sit for pain.
- And then he laid him on the bed
- And ne'er got up again.
- _The Gipsy's Camp_
- How oft on Sundays, when I'd time to tramp,
- My rambles led me to a gipsy's camp,
- Where the real effigy of midnight hags,
- With tawny smoked flesh and tattered rags,
- Uncouth-brimmed hat, and weather-beaten cloak,
- Neath the wild shelter of a knotty oak,
- Along the greensward uniformly pricks
- Her pliant bending hazel's arching sticks:
- While round-topt bush, or briar-entangled hedge,
- Where flag-leaves spring beneath, or ramping sedge,
- Keeps off the bothering bustle of the wind,
- And give the best retreat she hopes to find.
- How oft I've bent me oer her fire and smoke,
- To hear her gibberish tale so quaintly spoke,
- While the old Sybil forged her boding clack,
- Twin imps the meanwhile bawling at her back;
- Oft on my hand her magic coin's been struck,
- And hoping chink, she talked of morts of luck:
- And still, as boyish hopes did first agree,
- Mingled with fears to drop the fortune's fee,
- I never failed to gain the honours sought,
- And Squire and Lord were purchased with a groat.
- But as man's unbelieving taste came round,
- She furious stampt her shoeless foot aground,
- Wiped bye her soot-black hair with clenching fist,
- While through her yellow teeth the spittle hist,
- Swearing by all her lucky powers of fate,
- Which like as footboys on her actions wait,
- That fortune's scale should to my sorrow turn,
- And I one day the rash neglect should mourn;
- That good to bad should change, and I should be
- Lost to this world and all eternity;
- That poor as Job I should remain unblest:--
- (Alas, for fourpence how my die is cast!)
- Of not a hoarded farthing be possesst,
- And when all's done, be shoved to hell at last!
- _Impromptu_
- "Where art thou wandering, little child?"
- I said to one I met to-day.--
- She pushed her bonnet up and smiled,
- "I'm going upon the green to play:
- Folks tell me that the May's in flower,
- That cowslip-peeps are fit to pull,
- And I've got leave to spend an hour
- To get this little basket full."
- --And thou'st got leave to spend an hour!
- My heart repeated.--She was gone;
- --And thou hast heard the thorn's in flower,
- And childhood's bliss is urging on:
- Ah, happy child! thou mak'st me sigh,
- This once as happy heart of mine,
- Would nature with the boon comply,
- How gladly would I change for thine.
- _The Wood-cutter's Night Song_
- Welcome, red and roundy sun,
- Dropping lowly in the west;
- Now my hard day's work is done,
- I'm as happy as the best.
- Joyful are the thoughts of home,
- Now I'm ready for my chair,
- So, till morrow-morning's come,
- Bill and mittens, lie ye there!
- Though to leave your pretty song,
- Little birds, it gives me pain,
- Yet to-morrow is not long,
- Then I'm with you all again.
- If I stop, and stand about,
- Well I know how things will be,
- Judy will be looking out
- Every now-and-then for me.
- So fare ye well! and hold your tongues,
- Sing no more until I come;
- They're not worthy of your songs
- That never care to drop a crumb.
- All day long I love the oaks,
- But, at nights, yon little cot,
- Where I see the chimney smokes,
- Is by far the prettiest spot.
- Wife and children all are there,
- To revive with pleasant looks,
- Table ready set, and chair,
- Supper hanging on the hooks.
- Soon as ever I get in,
- When my faggot down I fling,
- Little prattlers they begin
- Teasing me to talk and sing.
- Welcome, red and roundy sun,
- Dropping lowly in the west;
- Now my hard day's work is done,
- I'm as happy as the best.
- Joyful are the thoughts of home,
- Now I'm ready for my chair,
- So, till morrow-morning's come,
- Bill and mittens, lie ye there!
- _Rural Morning_
- Soon as the twilight through the distant mist
- In silver hemmings skirts the purple east,
- Ere yet the sun unveils his smiles to view
- And dries the morning's chilly robes of dew,
- Young Hodge the horse-boy, with a soodly gait,
- Slow climbs the stile, or opes the creaky gate,
- With willow switch and halter by his side
- Prepared for Dobbin, whom he means to ride;
- The only tune he knows still whistling oer,
- And humming scraps his father sung before,
- As "Wantley Dragon," and the "Magic Rose,"
- The whole of music that his village knows,
- Which wild remembrance, in each little town,
- From mouth to mouth through ages handles down.
- Onward he jolls, nor can the minstrel-throngs
- Entice him once to listen to their songs;
- Nor marks he once a blossom on his way;
- A senseless lump of animated clay--
- With weather-beaten hat of rusty brown,
- Stranger to brinks, and often to a crown;
- With slop-frock suiting to the ploughman's taste,
- Its greasy skirtings twisted round his waist;
- And hardened high-lows clenched with nails around,
- Clamping defiance oer the stoney ground,
- The deadly foes to many a blossomed sprout
- That luckless meets him in his morning's rout.
- In hobbling speed he roams the pasture round,
- Till hunted Dobbin and the rest are found;
- Where some, from frequent meddlings of his whip,
- Well know their foe, and often try to slip;
- While Dobbin, tamed by age and labour, stands
- To meet all trouble from his brutish hands,
- And patient goes to gate or knowly brake,
- The teasing burden of his foe to take;
- Who, soon as mounted, with his switching weals,
- Puts Dob's best swiftness in his heavy heels,
- The toltering bustle of a blundering trot
- Which whips and cudgels neer increased a jot,
- Though better speed was urged by the clown--
- And thus he snorts and jostles to the town.
- And now, when toil and summer's in its prime,
- In every vill, at morning's earliest time,
- To early-risers many a Hodge is seen,
- And many a Dob's heard clattering oer the green.
- Now straying beams from day's unclosing eye
- In copper-coloured patches flush the sky,
- And from night's prison strugglingly encroach,
- To bring the summons of warm day's approach,
- Till, slowly mounting oer the ridge of clouds
- That yet half shows his face, and half enshrouds,
- The unfettered sun takes his unbounded reign
- And wakes all life to noise and toil again:
- And while his opening mellows oer the scenes
- Of wood and field their many mingling greens,
- Industry's bustling din once more devours
- The soothing peace of morning's early hours:
- The grunt of hogs freed from their nightly dens
- And constant cacklings of new-laying hens,
- And ducks and geese that clamorous joys repeat
- The splashing comforts of the pond to meet,
- And chirping sparrows dropping from the eaves
- For offal kernels that the poultry leaves,
- Oft signal-calls of danger chittering high
- At skulking cats and dogs approaching nigh.
- And lowing steers that hollow echoes wake
- Around the yard, their nightly fast to break,
- As from each barn the lumping flail rebounds
- In mingling concert with the rural sounds;
- While oer the distant fields more faintly creep
- The murmuring bleatings of unfolding sheep,
- And ploughman's callings that more hoarse proceed
- Where industry still urges labour's speed,
- The bellowing of cows with udders full
- That wait the welcome halloo of "come mull,"
- And rumbling waggons deafening again,
- Rousing the dust along the narrow lane,
- And cracking whips, and shepherd's hooting cries,
- From woodland echoes urging sharp replies.
- Hodge, in his waggon, marks the wondrous tongue,
- And talks with echo as he drives along;
- Still cracks his whip, bawls every horse's name,
- And echo still as ready bawls the same:
- The puzzling mystery he would gladly cheat,
- And fain would utter what it can't repeat,
- Till speedless trials prove the doubted elf
- As skilled in noise and sounds as Hodge himself;
- And, quite convinced with the proofs it gives,
- The boy drives on and fancies echo lives,
- Like some wood-fiend that frights benighted men,
- The troubling spirit of a robber's den.
- And now the blossom of the village view,
- With airy hat of straw, and apron blue,
- And short-sleeved gown, that half to guess reveals
- By fine-turned arms what beauty it conceals;
- Whose cheeks health flushes with as sweet a red
- As that which stripes the woodbine oer her head;
- Deeply she blushes on her morn's employ,
- To prove the fondness of some passing boy,
- Who, with a smile that thrills her soul to view,
- Holds the gate open till she passes through,
- While turning nods beck thanks for kindness done,
- And looks--if looks could speak-proclaim her won.
- With well-scoured buckets on proceeds the maid,
- And drives her cows to milk beneath the shade,
- Where scarce a sunbeam to molest her steals--
- Sweet as the thyme that blossoms where she kneels;
- And there oft scares the cooing amorous dove
- With her own favoured melodies of love.
- Snugly retired in yet dew-laden bowers,
- This sweetest specimen of rural flowers
- Displays, red glowing in the morning wind,
- The powers of health and nature when combined.
- Last on the road the cowboy careless swings,
- Leading tamed cattle in their tending strings,
- With shining tin to keep his dinner warm
- Swung at his back, or tucked beneath his arm;
- Whose sun-burnt skin, and cheeks chuffed out with fat,
- Are dyed as rusty as his napless hat.
- And others, driving loose their herds at will,
- Are now heard whooping up the pasture-hill;
- Peeled sticks they bear of hazel or of ash,
- The rib-marked hides of restless cows to thrash.
- In sloven garb appears each bawling boy,
- As fit and suiting to his rude employ;
- His shoes, worn down by many blundering treads,
- Oft show the tenants needing safer sheds:
- The pithy bunch of unripe nuts to seek,
- And crabs sun-reddened with a tempting cheek,
- From pasture hedges, daily puts to rack
- His tattered clothes, that scarcely screen the back,--
- Daubed all about as if besmeared with blood,
- Stained with the berries of the brambly wood
- That stud the straggling briars as black as jet,
- Which, when his cattle lair, he runs to get;
- Or smaller kinds, as if beglossed with dew
- Shining dim-powdered with a downy blue,
- That on weak tendrils lowly creeping grow
- Where, choaked in flags and sedges, wandering slow,
- The brook purls simmering its declining tide
- Down the crooked boundings of the pasture-side.
- There they to hunt the luscious fruit delight,
- And dabbling keep within their charges' sight;
- Oft catching prickly struttles on their rout,
- And miller-thumbs and gudgeons driving out,
- Hid near the arched brig under many a stone
- That from its wall rude passing clowns have thrown.
- And while in peace cows eat, and chew their cuds,
- Moozing cool sheltered neath the skirting woods,
- To double uses they the hours convert,
- Turning the toils of labour into sport;
- Till morn's long streaking shadows lose their tails,
- And cooling winds swoon into faultering gales;
- And searching sunbeams warm and sultry creep,
- Waking the teazing insects from their sleep;
- And dreaded gadflies with their drowsy hum
- On the burnt wings of mid-day zephyrs come,--
- Urging each lown to leave his sports in fear,
- To stop his starting cows that dread the fly;
- Droning unwelcome tidings on his ear,
- That the sweet peace of rural morn's gone by.
- _Song_
- One gloomy eve I roamed about
- Neath Oxey's hazel bowers,
- While timid hares were darting out,
- To crop the dewy flowers;
- And soothing was the scene to me,
- Right pleased was my soul,
- My breast was calm as summer's sea
- When waves forget to roll.
- But short was even's placid smile,
- My startled soul to charm,
- When Nelly lightly skipt the stile,
- With milk-pail on her arm:
- One careless look on me she flung,
- As bright as parting day;
- And like a hawk from covert sprung,
- It pounced my peace away.
- _The Cross Roads; or, The Haymaker's Story_
- Stopt by the storm, that long in sullen black
- From the south-west stained its encroaching track,
- Haymakers, hustling from the rain to hide,
- Sought the grey willows by the pasture-side;
- And there, while big drops bow the grassy stems,
- And bleb the withering hay with pearly gems,
- Dimple the brook, and patter in the leaves,
- The song or tale an hour's restraint relieves.
- And while the old dames gossip at their ease,
- And pinch the snuff-box empty by degrees,
- The young ones join in love's delightful themes,
- Truths told by gipsies, and expounded dreams;
- And mutter things kept secrets from the rest,
- As sweethearts' names, and whom they love the best;
- And dazzling ribbons they delight to show,
- And last new favours of some veigling beau,
- Who with such treachery tries their hearts to move,
- And, like the highest, bribes the maidens' love.
- The old dames, jealous of their whispered praise,
- Throw in their hints of man's deluding ways;
- And one, to give her counsels more effect,
- And by example illustrate the fact
- Of innocence oercome by flattering man,
- Thrice tapped her box, and pinched, and thus began.
- "Now wenches listen, and let lovers lie,
- Ye'll hear a story ye may profit by;
- I'm your age treble, with some oddments to't,
- And right from wrong can tell, if ye'll but do't:
- Ye need not giggle underneath your hat,
- Mine's no joke-matter, let me tell you that;
- So keep ye quiet till my story's told,
- And don't despise your betters cause they're old.
- "That grave ye've heard of, where the four roads meet,
- Where walks the spirit in a winding-sheet,
- Oft seen at night, by strangers passing late,
- And tarrying neighbours that at market wait,
- Stalking along as white as driven snow,
- And long as one's shadow when the sun is low;
- The girl that's buried there I knew her well,
- And her whole history, if ye'll hark, can tell.
- Her name was Jane, and neighbour's children we,
- And old companions once, as ye may be;
- And like to you, on Sundays often strolled
- To gipsies' camps to have our fortunes told;
- And oft, God rest her, in the fortune-book
- Which we at hay-time in our pockets took,
- Our pins at blindfold on the wheel we stuck,
- When hers would always prick the worst of luck;
- For try, poor thing, as often as she might,
- Her point would always on the blank alight;
- Which plainly shows the fortune one's to have,
- As such like go unwedded to the grave,--
- And so it proved.--The next succeeding May,
- We both to service went from sports and play,
- Though in the village still; as friends and kin
- Thought neighbour's service better to begin.
- So out we went:--Jane's place was reckoned good,
- Though she bout life but little understood,
- And had a master wild as wild can be,
- And far unfit for such a child as she;
- And soon the whisper went about the town,
- That Jane's good looks procured her many a gown
- From him, whose promise was to every one,
- But whose intention was to wive with none.
- Twas nought to wonder, though begun by guess;
- For Jane was lovely in her Sunday dress,
- And all expected such a rosy face
- Would be her ruin--as was just the case.
- The while the change was easily perceived,
- Some months went by, ere I the tales believed;
- For there are people nowadays, Lord knows,
- Will sooner hatch up lies than mend their clothes;
- And when with such-like tattle they begin,
- Don't mind whose character they spoil a pin:
- But passing neighbours often marked them smile,
- And watched him take her milkpail oer a stile;
- And many a time, as wandering closer by,
- From Jenny's bosom met a heavy sigh;
- And often marked her, as discoursing deep,
- When doubts might rise to give just cause to weep,
- Smothering their notice, by a wished disguise
- To slive her apron corner to her eyes.
- Such signs were mournful and alarming things,
- And far more weighty than conjecture brings;
- Though foes made double what they heard of all,
- Swore lies as proofs, and prophesied her fall.
- Poor thoughtless wench! it seems but Sunday past
- Since we went out together for the last,
- And plain enough indeed it was to find
- She'd something more than common on her mind;
- For she was always fond and full of chat,
- In passing harmless jokes bout beaus and that,
- But nothing then was scarcely talked about,
- And what there was, I even forced it out.
- A gloomy wanness spoiled her rosy cheek,
- And doubts hung there it was not mine to seek;
- She neer so much as mentioned things to come,
- But sighed oer pleasures ere she left her home;
- And now and then a mournful smile would raise
- At freaks repeated of our younger days,
- Which I brought up, while passing spots of ground
- Where we, when children, "hurly-burlied" round,
- Or "blindman-buffed" some morts of hours away--
- Two games, poor thing, Jane dearly loved to play.
- She smiled at these, but shook her head and sighed
- When eer she thought my look was turned aside;
- Nor turned she round, as was her former way,
- To praise the thorn, white over then with May;
- Nor stooped once, though thousands round her grew,
- To pull a cowslip as she used to do:
- For Jane in flowers delighted from a child--
- I like the garden, but she loved the wild--
- And oft on Sundays young men's gifts declined,
- Posies from gardens of the sweetest kind,
- And eager scrambled the dog-rose to get,
- And woodbine-flowers at every bush she met.
- The cowslip blossom, with its ruddy streak,
- Would tempt her furlongs from the path to seek;
- And gay long purple, with its tufty spike,
- She'd wade oer shoes to reach it in the dyke;
- And oft, while scratching through the briary woods
- For tempting cuckoo-flowers and violet buds,
- Poor Jane, I've known her crying sneak to town,
- Fearing her mother, when she'd torn her gown.
- Ah, these were days her conscience viewed with pain,
- Which all are loth to lose, as well as Jane.
- And, what I took more odd than all the rest,
- Was, that same night she neer a wish exprest
- To see the gipsies, so beloved before,
- That lay a stone's throw from us on the moor:
- I hinted it; she just replied again--
- She once believed them, but had doubts since then.
- And when we sought our cows, I called, "Come mull!"
- But she stood silent, for her heart was full.
- She loved dumb things: and ere she had begun
- To milk, caressed them more than eer she'd done;
- But though her tears stood watering in her eye,
- I little took it as her last good-bye;
- For she was tender, and I've often known
- Her mourn when beetles have been trampled on:
- So I neer dreamed from this, what soon befell,
- Till the next morning rang her passing-bell.
- My story's long, but time's in plenty yet,
- Since the black clouds betoken nought but wet;
- And I'll een snatch a minute's breath or two,
- And take another pinch, to help me through.
- "So, as I said, next morn I heard the bell,
- And passing neighbours crossed the street, to tell
- That my poor partner Jenny had been found
- In the old flag-pool, on the pasture, drowned.
- God knows my heart! I twittered like a leaf,
- And found too late the cause of Sunday's grief;
- For every tongue was loosed to gabble oer
- The slanderous things that secret passed before:
- With truth or lies they need not then be strict,
- The one they railed at could not contradict.
- Twas now no secret of her being beguiled,
- For every mouth knew Jenny died with child;
- And though more cautious with a living name,
- Each more than guessed her master bore the blame.
- That very morning, it affects me still,
- Ye know the foot-path sidles down the hill,
- Ignorant as babe unborn I passed the pond
- To milk as usual in our close beyond,
- And cows were drinking at the water's edge,
- And horses browsed among the flags and sedge,
- And gnats and midges danced the water oer,
- Just as I've marked them scores of times before,
- And birds sat singing, as in mornings gone,--
- While I as unconcerned went soodling on,
- But little dreaming, as the wakening wind
- Flapped the broad ash-leaves oer the pond reclin'd,
- And oer the water crinked the curdled wave,
- That Jane was sleeping in her watery grave.
- The neatherd boy that used to tend the cows,
- While getting whip-sticks from the dangling boughs
- Of osiers drooping by the water-side,
- Her bonnet floating on the top espied;
- He knew it well, and hastened fearful down
- To take the terror of his fears to town,--
- A melancholy story, far too true;
- And soon the village to the pasture flew,
- Where, from the deepest hole the pond about,
- They dragged poor Jenny's lifeless body out,
- And took her home, where scarce an hour gone by
- She had been living like to you and I.
- I went with more, and kissed her for the last,
- And thought with tears on pleasures that were past;
- And, the last kindness left me then to do,
- I went, at milking, where the blossoms grew,
- And handfuls got of rose and lambtoe sweet,
- And put them with her in her winding-sheet.
- A wilful murder, jury made the crime;
- Nor parson 'lowed to pray, nor bell to chime;
- On the cross roads, far from her friends and kin,
- The usual law for their ungodly sin
- Who violent hands upon themselves have laid,
- Poor Jane's last bed unchristian-like was made;
- And there, like all whose last thoughts turn to heaven,
- She sleeps, and doubtless hoped to be forgiven.
- But, though I say't, for maids thus veigled in
- I think the wicked men deserve the sin;
- And sure enough we all at last shall see
- The treachery punished as it ought to be.
- For ere his wickedness pretended love,
- Jane, I'll be bound, was spotless as the dove,
- And's good a servant, still old folks allow,
- As ever scoured a pail or milked a cow;
- And ere he led her into ruin's way,
- As gay and buxom as a summer's day:
- The birds that ranted in the hedge-row boughs,
- As night and morning we have sought our cows,
- With yokes and buckets as she bounced along,
- Were often deafed to silence with her song.
- But now she's gone:--girls, shun deceitful men,
- The worst of stumbles ye can fall agen;
- Be deaf to them, and then, as twere, ye'll see
- Your pleasures safe as under lock and key.
- Throw not my words away, as many do;
- They're gold in value, though they're cheap to you.
- And husseys hearken, and be warned from this,
- If ye love mothers, never do amiss:
- Jane might love hers, but she forsook the plan
- To make her happy, when she thought of man.
- Poor tottering dame, it was too plainly known,
- Her daughter's dying hastened on her own,
- For from the day the tidings reached her door
- She took to bed and looked up no more,
- And, ere again another year came round,
- She, well as Jane, was laid within the ground;
- And all were grieved poor Goody's end to see:
- No better neighbour entered house than she,
- A harmless soul, with no abusive tongue,
- Trig as new pins, and tight's the day was long;
- And go the week about, nine times in ten
- Ye'd find her house as cleanly as her sen.
- But, Lord protect us! time such change does bring,
- We cannot dream what oer our heads may hing;
- The very house she lived in, stick and stone,
- Since Goody died, has tumbled down and gone:
- And where the marjoram once, and sage, and rue,
- And balm, and mint, with curled-leaf parsley grew,
- And double marygolds, and silver thyme,
- And pumpkins neath the window used to climb;
- And where I often when a child for hours
- Tried through the pales to get the tempting flowers,
- As lady's laces, everlasting peas,
- True-love-lies-bleeding, with the hearts-at-ease,
- And golden rods, and tansy running high
- That oer the pale-tops smiled on passers-by,
- Flowers in my time that every one would praise,
- Though thrown like weeds from gardens nowadays;
- Where these all grew, now henbane stinks and spreads,
- And docks and thistles shake their seedy heads,
- And yearly keep with nettles smothering oer;--
- The house, the dame, the garden known no more:
- While, neighbouring nigh, one lonely elder-tree
- Is all that's left of what had used to be,
- Marking the place, and bringing up with tears
- The recollections of one's younger years.
- And now I've done, ye're each at once as free
- To take your trundle as ye used to be;
- To take right ways, as Jenny should have ta'en,
- Or headlong run, and be a second Jane;
- For by one thoughtless girl that's acted ill
- A thousand may be guided if they will:
- As oft mong folks to labour bustling on,
- We mark the foremost kick against a stone,
- Or stumble oer a stile he meant to climb,
- While hind ones see and shun the fall in time.
- But ye, I will be bound, like far the best
- Love's tickling nick-nacks and the laughing jest,
- And ten times sooner than be warned by me,
- Would each be sitting on some fellow's knee,
- Sooner believe the lies wild chaps will tell
- Than old dames' cautions, who would wish ye well:
- So have your wills."--She pinched her box again,
- And ceased her tale, and listened to the rain,
- Which still as usual pattered fast around,
- And bowed the bent-head loaded to the ground;
- While larks, their naked nest by force forsook,
- Pruned their wet wings in bushes by the brook.
- The maids, impatient now old Goody ceased,
- As restless children from the school released,
- Right gladly proving, what she'd just foretold,
- That young ones' stories were preferred to old,
- Turn to the whisperings of their former joy,
- That oft deceive, but very rarely cloy.
- _In Hilly-Wood_
- How sweet to be thus nestling deep in boughs,
- Upon an ashen stoven pillowing me;
- Faintly are heard the ploughmen at their ploughs,
- But not an eye can find its way to see.
- The sunbeams scarce molest me with a smile,
- So thickly the leafy armies gather round;
- And where they do, the breeze blows cool the while,
- Their leafy shadows dancing on the ground.
- Full many a flower, too, wishing to be seen,
- Perks up its head the hiding grass between,--
- In mid-wood silence, thus, how sweet to be;
- Where all the noises, that on peace intrude,
- Come from the chittering cricket, bird, and bee,
- Whose songs have charms to sweeten solitude.
- _The Ants_
- What wonder strikes the curious, while he views
- The black ant's city, by a rotten tree,
- Or woodland bank! In ignorance we muse:
- Pausing, annoyed,--we know not what we see,
- Such government and thought there seem to be;
- Some looking on, and urging some to toil,
- Dragging their loads of bent-stalks slavishly:
- And what's more wonderful, when big loads foil
- One ant or two to carry, quickly then
- A swarm flock round to help their fellow-men.
- Surely they speak a language whisperingly,
- Too fine for us to hear; and sure their ways
- Prove they have kings and laws, and that they be
- Deformed remnants of the Fairy-days.
- _To Anna Three Years Old_
- My Anna, summer laughs in mirth,
- And we will of the party be,
- And leave the crickets in the hearth
- For green fields' merry minstrelsy.
- I see thee now with little hand
- Catch at each object passing bye,
- The happiest thing in all the land
- Except the bee and butterfly.
- * * * * *
- And limpid brook that leaps along,
- Gilt with the summer's burnished gleam,
- Will stop thy little tale or song
- To gaze upon its crimping stream.
- Thou'lt leave my hand with eager speed
- The new discovered things to see--
- The old pond with its water weed
- And danger-daring willow tree,
- Who leans an ancient invalid
- Oer spots where deepest waters be.
- In sudden shout and wild surprise
- I hear thy simple wonderment,
- As new things meet thy childish eyes
- And wake some innocent intent;
- As bird or bee or butterfly
- Bounds through the crowd of merry leaves
- And starts the rapture of thine eye
- To run for what it neer achieves.
- But thou art on the bed of pain,
- So tells each poor forsaken toy.
- Ah, could I see that happy hour
- When these shall be thy heart's employ,
- And see thee toddle oer the plain,
- And stoop for flowers, and shout for joy.
- _From "The Parish: A Satire"_
- I
- In politics and politicians' lies
- The modern farmer waxes wondrous wise;
- Opinionates with wisdom all compact,
- And een could tell a nation how to act;
- Throws light on darkness with excessive skill,
- Knows who acts well and whose designs are ill,
- Proves half the members nought but bribery's tools,
- And calls the past a dull dark age of fools.
- As wise as Solomon they read the news,
- Not with their blind forefathers' simple views,
- Who read of wars, and wished that wars would cease,
- And blessed the King, and wished his country peace;
- Who marked the weight of each fat sheep and ox,
- The price of grain and rise and fall of stocks;
- Who thought it learning how to buy and sell,
- And him a wise man who could manage well.
- No, not with such old-fashioned, idle views
- Do these newsmongers traffic with the news.
- They read of politics and not of grain,
- And speechify and comment and explain,
- And know so much of Parliament and state
- You'd think they're members when you heard them prate;
- And know so little of their farms the while
- They can but urge a wiser man to smile.
- II
- A thing all consequence here takes the lead,
- Reigning knight-errant oer this dirty breed--
- A bailiff he, and who so great to brag
- Of law and all its terrors as Bumtagg;
- Fawning a puppy at his master's side
- And frowning like a wolf on all beside;
- Who fattens best where sorrow worst appears
- And feeds on sad misfortune's bitterest tears?
- Such is Bumtagg the bailiff to a hair,
- The worshipper and demon of despair,
- Who waits and hopes and wishes for success
- At every nod and signal of distress,
- Happy at heart, when storms begin to boil,
- To seek the shipwreck and to share the spoil.
- Brave is this Bumtagg, match him if you can;
- For there's none like him living--save his man.
- As every animal assists his kind
- Just so are these in blood and business joined;
- Yet both in different colours hide their art,
- And each as suits his ends transacts his part.
- One keeps the heart-bred villain full in sight,
- The other cants and acts the hypocrite,
- Smoothing the deed where law sharks set their gin
- Like a coy dog to draw misfortune in.
- But both will chuckle oer their prisoners' sighs
- And are as blest as spiders over flies.
- Such is Bumtagg, whose history I resign,
- As other knaves wait room to stink and shine;
- And, as the meanest knave a dog can brag,
- Such is the lurcher that assists Bumtagg.
- _Nobody Cometh to Woo_
- On Martinmas eve the dogs did bark,
- And I opened the window to see,
- When every maiden went by with her spark
- But neer a one came to me.
- And O dear what will become of me?
- And O dear what shall I do,
- When nobody whispers to marry me--
- Nobody cometh to woo?
- None's born for such troubles as I be:
- If the sun wakens first in the morn
- "Lazy hussy" my parents both call me,
- And I must abide by their scorn,
- For nobody cometh to marry me,
- Nobody cometh to woo,
- So here in distress must I tarry me--
- What can a poor maiden do?
- If I sigh through the window when Jerry
- The ploughman goes by, I grow bold;
- And if I'm disposed to be merry,
- My parents do nothing but scold;
- And Jerry the clown, and no other,
- Eer cometh to marry or woo;
- They think me the moral of mother
- And judge me a terrible shrew.
- For mother she hateth all fellows,
- And spinning's my father's desire,
- While the old cat growls bass with the bellows
- If eer I hitch up to the fire.
- I make the whole house out of humour,
- I wish nothing else but to please,
- Would fortune but bring a new comer
- To marry, and make me at ease!
- When I've nothing my leisure to hinder
- I scarce get as far as the eaves;
- Her head's instant out of the window
- Calling out like a press after thieves.
- The young men all fall to remarking,
- And laugh till they're weary to see't,
- While the dogs at the noise begin barking,
- And I slink in with shame from the street.
- My mother's aye jealous of loving,
- My father's aye jealous of play,
- So what with them both there's no moving,
- I'm in durance for life and a day.
- O who shall I get for to marry me?
- Who will have pity to woo?
- Tis death any longer to tarry me,
- And what shall a poor maiden do?
- _Distant Hills_
- What is there in those distant hills
- My fancy longs to see,
- That many a mood of joy instils?
- Say what can fancy be?
- Do old oaks thicken all the woods,
- With weeds and brakes as here?
- Does common water make the floods,
- That's common everywhere?
- Is grass the green that clothes the ground?
- Are springs the common springs?
- Daisies and cowslips dropping round,
- Are such the flowers she brings?
- * * * * *
- Are cottages of mud and stone,
- By valley wood and glen,
- And their calm dwellers little known
- Men, and but common men,
- That drive afield with carts and ploughs?
- Such men are common here,
- And pastoral maidens milking cows
- Are dwelling everywhere.
- If so my fancy idly clings
- To notions far away,
- And longs to roam for common things
- All round her every day,
- Right idle would the journey be
- To leave one's home so far,
- And see the moon I now can see
- And every little star.
- And have they there a night and day,
- And common counted hours?
- And do they see so far away
- This very moon of ours?
- * * * * *
- I mark him climb above the trees
- With one small [comrade] star,
- And think me in my reveries--
- He cannot shine so far.
- * * * * *
- The poets in the tales they tell
- And with their happy powers
- Have made lands where their fancies dwell
- Seem better lands than ours.
- Why need I sigh far hills to see
- If grass is their array,
- While here the little paths go through
- The greenest every day?
- Such fancies fill the restless mind,
- At once to cheat and cheer
- With thought and semblance undefined,
- Nowhere and everywhere.
- MIDDLE PERIOD 1824-1836
- _The Stranger_
- When trouble haunts me, need I sigh?
- No, rather smile away despair;
- For those have been more sad than I,
- With burthens more than I could bear;
- Aye, gone rejoicing under care
- Where I had sunk in black despair.
- When pain disturbs my peace and rest,
- Am I a hopeless grief to keep,
- When some have slept on torture's breast
- And smiled as in the sweetest sleep,
- Aye, peace on thorns, in faith forgiven,
- And pillowed on the hope of heaven?
- Though low and poor and broken down,
- Am I to think myself distrest?
- No, rather laugh where others frown
- And think my being truly blest;
- For others I can daily see
- More worthy riches worse than me.
- Aye, once a stranger blest the earth
- Who never caused a heart to mourn,
- Whose very voice gave sorrow mirth--
- And how did earth his worth return?
- It spurned him from its lowliest lot,
- The meanest station owned him not;
- An outcast thrown in sorrow's way,
- A fugitive that knew no sin,
- Yet in lone places forced to stray--
- Men would not take the stranger in.
- Yet peace, though much himself he mourned,
- Was all to others he returned.
- * * * * *
- His presence was a peace to all,
- He bade the sorrowful rejoice.
- Pain turned to pleasure at his call,
- Health lived and issued from his voice.
- He healed the sick and sent abroad
- The dumb rejoicing in the Lord.
- The blind met daylight in his eye,
- The joys of everlasting day;
- The sick found health in his reply;
- The cripple threw his crutch away.
- Yet he with troubles did remain
- And suffered poverty and pain.
- Yet none could say of wrong he did,
- And scorn was ever standing bye;
- Accusers by their conscience chid,
- When proof was sought, made no reply.
- Yet without sin he suffered more
- Than ever sinners did before.
- _Song's Eternity_
- What is song's eternity?
- Come and see.
- Can it noise and bustle be?
- Come and see.
- Praises sung or praises said
- Can it be?
- Wait awhile and these are dead--
- Sigh, sigh;
- Be they high or lowly bred They die.
- What is song's eternity?
- Come and see.
- Melodies of earth and sky,
- Here they be.
- Song once sung to Adam's ears
- Can it be?
- Ballads of six thousand years
- Thrive, thrive;
- Songs awaken with the spheres
- Alive.
- Mighty songs that miss decay,
- What are they?
- Crowds and cities pass away
- Like a day.
- Books are out and books are read;
- What are they?
- Years will lay them with the dead--
- Sigh, sigh;
- Trifles unto nothing wed,
- They die.
- Dreamers, mark the honey bee;
- Mark the tree
- Where the blue cap "_tootle tee_"
- Sings a glee
- Sung to Adam and to Eve
- Here they be.
- When floods covered every bough,
- Noah's ark
- Heard that ballad singing now;
- Hark, hark,
- "_Tootle tootle tootle tee_"--
- Can it be
- Pride and fame must shadows be?
- Come and see--
- Every season own her own;
- Bird and bee
- Sing creation's music on;
- Nature's glee
- Is in every mood and tone
- Eternity.
- _The Old Cottagers_
- The little cottage stood alone, the pride
- Of solitude surrounded every side.
- Bean fields in blossom almost reached the wall;
- A garden with its hawthorn hedge was all
- The space between.--Green light did pass
- Through one small window, where a looking-glass
- Placed in the parlour, richly there revealed
- A spacious landscape and a blooming field.
- The pasture cows that herded on the moor
- Printed their footsteps to the very door,
- Where little summer flowers with seasons blow
- And scarcely gave the eldern leave to grow.
- The cuckoo that one listens far away
- Sung in the orchard trees for half the day;
- And where the robin lives, the village guest,
- In the old weedy hedge the leafy nest
- Of the coy nightingale was yearly found,
- Safe from all eyes as in the loneliest ground;
- And little chats that in bean stalks will lie
- A nest with cobwebs there will build, and fly
- Upon the kidney bean that twines and towers
- Up little poles in wreaths of scarlet flowers.
- There a lone couple lived, secluded there
- From all the world considers joy or care,
- Lived to themselves, a long lone journey trod,
- And through their Bible talked aloud to God;
- While one small close and cow their wants maintained,
- But little needing, and but little gained.
- Their neighbour's name was peace, with her they went,
- With tottering age, and dignified content,
- Through a rich length of years and quiet days,
- And filled the neighbouring village with their praise.
- _Young Lambs_
- The spring is coming by a many signs;
- The trays are up, the hedges broken down,
- That fenced the haystack, and the remnant shines
- Like some old antique fragment weathered brown.
- And where suns peep, in every sheltered place,
- The little early buttercups unfold
- A glittering star or two--till many trace
- The edges of the blackthorn clumps in gold.
- And then a little lamb bolts up behind
- The hill and wags his tail to meet the yoe,
- And then another, sheltered from the wind,
- Lies all his length as dead--and lets me go
- Close bye and never stirs but baking lies,
- With legs stretched out as though he could not rise.
- _Early Nightingale_
- When first we hear the shy-come nightingales,
- They seem to mutter oer their songs in fear,
- And, climb we eer so soft the spinney rails,
- All stops as if no bird was anywhere.
- The kindled bushes with the young leaves thin
- Let curious eyes to search a long way in,
- Until impatience cannot see or hear
- The hidden music; gets but little way
- Upon the path--when up the songs begin,
- Full loud a moment and then low again.
- But when a day or two confirms her stay
- Boldly she sings and loud for half the day;
- And soon the village brings the woodman's tale
- Of having heard the newcome nightingale.
- _Winter Walk_
- The holly bush, a sober lump of green,
- Shines through the leafless shrubs all brown and grey,
- And smiles at winter be it eer so keen
- With all the leafy luxury of May.
- And O it is delicious, when the day
- In winter's loaded garment keenly blows
- And turns her back on sudden falling snows,
- To go where gravel pathways creep between
- Arches of evergreen that scarce let through
- A single feather of the driving storm;
- And in the bitterest day that ever blew
- The walk will find some places still and warm
- Where dead leaves rustle sweet and give alarm
- To little birds that flirt and start away.
- _The Soldier_
- Home furthest off grows dearer from the way;
- And when the army in the Indias lay
- Friends' letters coming from his native place
- Were like old neighbours with their country face.
- And every opportunity that came
- Opened the sheet to gaze upon the name
- Of that loved village where he left his sheep
- For more contented peaceful folk to keep;
- And friendly faces absent many a year
- Would from such letters in his mind appear.
- And when his pockets, chafing through the case,
- Wore it quite out ere others took the place,
- Right loath to be of company bereft
- He kept the fragments while a bit was left.
- _Ploughman Singing_
- Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met
- Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,
- And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,
- Shows not her sleeve of grey to know her bye.
- Woke early, I arose and thought that first
- In winter time of all the world was I.
- The old owls might have hallooed if they durst,
- But joy just then was up and whistled bye
- A merry tune which I had known full long,
- But could not to my memory wake it back,
- Until the ploughman changed it to the song.
- O happiness, how simple is thy track.
- --Tinged like the willow shoots, the east's young brow
- Glows red and finds thee singing at the plough.
- _Spring's Messengers_
- Where slanting banks are always with the sun
- The daisy is in blossom even now;
- And where warm patches by the hedges run
- The cottager when coming home from plough
- Brings home a cowslip root in flower to set.
- Thus ere the Christmas goes the spring is met
- Setting up little tents about the fields
- In sheltered spots.--Primroses when they get
- Behind the wood's old roots, where ivy shields
- Their crimpled, curdled leaves, will shine and hide.
- Cart ruts and horses' footings scarcely yield
- A slur for boys, just crizzled and that's all.
- Frost shoots his needles by the small dyke side,
- And snow in scarce a feather's seen to fall.
- _Letter in Verse_
- Like boys that run behind the loaded wain
- For the mere joy of riding back again,
- When summer from the meadow carts the hay
- And school hours leave them half a day to play;
- So I with leisure on three sides a sheet
- Of foolscap dance with poesy's measured feet,
- Just to ride post upon the wings of time
- And kill a care, to friendship turned in rhyme.
- The muse's gallop hurries me in sport
- With much to read and little to divert,
- And I, amused, with less of wit than will,
- Run till I tire.--And so to cheat her still.
- Like children running races who shall be
- First in to touch the orchard wall or tree,
- The last half way behind, by distance vext,
- Turns short, determined to be first the next;
- So now the muse has run me hard and long--
- I'll leave at once her races and her song;
- And, turning round, laugh at the letter's close
- And beat her out by ending it in prose.
- _Snow Storm_
- What a night! The wind howls, hisses, and but stops
- To howl more loud, while the snow volley keeps
- Incessant batter at the window pane,
- Making our comfort feel as sweet again;
- And in the morning, when the tempest drops,
- At every cottage door mountainous heaps
- Of snow lie drifted, that all entrance stops
- Untill the beesom and the shovel gain
- The path, and leave a wall on either side.
- The shepherd rambling valleys white and wide
- With new sensations his old memory fills,
- When hedges left at night, no more descried,
- Are turned to one white sweep of curving hills,
- And trees turned bushes half their bodies hide.
- The boy that goes to fodder with surprise
- Walks oer the gate he opened yesternight.
- The hedges all have vanished from his eyes;
- Een some tree tops the sheep could reach to bite.
- The novel scene emboldens new delight,
- And, though with cautious steps his sports begin,
- He bolder shuffles the huge hills of snow,
- Till down he drops and plunges to the chin,
- And struggles much and oft escape to win--
- Then turns and laughs but dare not further go;
- For deep the grass and bushes lie below,
- Where little birds that soon at eve went in
- With heads tucked in their wings now pine for day
- And little feel boys oer their heads can stray.
- _Firwood_
- The fir trees taper into twigs and wear
- The rich blue green of summer all the year,
- Softening the roughest tempest almost calm
- And offering shelter ever still and warm
- To the small path that towels underneath,
- Where loudest winds--almost as summer's breath--
- Scarce fan the weed that lingers green below
- When others out of doors are lost in frost and snow.
- And sweet the music trembles on the ear
- As the wind suthers through each tiny spear,
- Makeshifts for leaves; and yet, so rich they show,
- Winter is almost summer where they grow.
- _Grasshoppers_
- Grasshoppers go in many a thumming spring
- And now to stalks of tasseled sow-grass cling,
- That shakes and swees awhile, but still keeps straight;
- While arching oxeye doubles with his weight.
- Next on the cat-tail-grass with farther bound
- He springs, that bends until they touch the ground.
- _Field Path_
- The beams in blossom with their spots of jet
- Smelt sweet as gardens wheresoever met;
- The level meadow grass was in the swath;
- The hedge briar rose hung right across the path,
- White over with its flowers--the grass that lay
- Bleaching beneath the twittering heat to hay
- Smelt so deliciously, the puzzled bee
- Went wondering where the honey sweets could be;
- And passer-bye along the level rows
- Stoopt down and whipt a bit beneath his nose.
- _Country Letter_
- Dear brother robin this comes from us all
- With our kind love and could Gip write and all
- Though but a dog he'd have his love to spare
- For still he knows and by your corner chair
- The moment he comes in he lyes him down
- and seems to fancy you are in the town.
- This leaves us well in health thank God for that
- For old acquaintance Sue has kept your hat
- Which mother brushes ere she lays it bye
- and every sunday goes upstairs to cry
- Jane still is yours till you come back agen
- and neer so much as dances with the men
- and ned the woodman every week comes in
- and asks about you kindly as our kin
- and he with this and goody Thompson sends
- Remembrances with those of all our friends
- Father with us sends love untill he hears
- and mother she has nothing but her tears
- Yet wishes you like us in health the same
- and longs to see a letter with your name
- So loving brother don't forget to write
- Old Gip lies on the hearth stone every night
- Mother can't bear to turn him out of doors
- and never noises now of dirty floors
- Father will laugh but lets her have her way
- and Gip for kindness get a double pay
- So Robin write and let us quickly see
- You don't forget old friends no more than we
- Nor let my mother have so much to blame
- To go three journeys ere your letter came.
- _From "January"_
- Supper removed, the mother sits,
- And tells her tales by starts and fits.
- Not willing to lose time or toil,
- She knits or sews, and talks the while
- Something, that may be warnings found
- To the young listeners gaping round--
- Of boys who in her early day
- Strolled to the meadow-lake to play,
- Where willows, oer the bank inclined
- Sheltered the water from the wind,
- And left it scarcely crizzled oer--
- When one sank in, to rise no more!
- And how, upon a market-night,
- When not a star bestowed its light,
- A farmer's shepherd, oer his glass,
- Forgot that he had woods to pass:
- And having sold his master's sheep,
- Was overta'en by darkness deep.
- How, coming with his startled horse,
- To where two roads a hollow cross;
- Where, lone guide when a stranger strays,
- A white post points four different ways,
- Beside the woodride's lonely gate
- A murdering robber lay in wait.
- The frightened horse, with broken rein,
- Stood at the stable-door again;
- But none came home to fill his rack,
- Or take the saddle from his back;
- The saddle--it was all he bore--
- The man was seen alive no more!--
- In her young days, beside the wood,
- The gibbet in its terror stood:
- Though now decayed, tis not forgot,
- But dreaded as a haunted spot.--
- She from her memory oft repeats
- Witches' dread powers and fairy feats:
- How one has oft been known to prance
- In cowcribs, like a coach, to France,
- And ride on sheep-trays from the fold
- A race-horse speed to Burton-hold;
- To join the midnight mystery's rout,
- Where witches meet the yews about:
- And how, when met with unawares,
- They turn at once to cats or hares,
- And race along with hellish flight,
- Now here, now there, now out of sight!--
- And how the other tiny things
- Will leave their moonlight meadow-rings,
- And, unperceived, through key-holes creep,
- When all around have sunk to sleep,
- To feast on what the cotter leaves,--
- Mice are not reckoned greater thieves.
- They take away, as well as eat,
- And still the housewife's eye they cheat,
- In spite of all the folks that swarm
- In cottage small and larger farm;
- They through each key-hole pop and pop,
- Like wasps into a grocer's shop,
- With all the things that they can win
- From chance to put their plunder in;--
- As shells of walnuts, split in two
- By crows, who with the kernels flew;
- Or acorn-cups, by stock-doves plucked,
- Or egg-shells by a cuckoo sucked;
- With broad leaves of the sycamore
- They clothe their stolen dainties oer:
- And when in cellar they regale,
- Bring hazel-nuts to hold their ale;
- With bung-holes bored by squirrels well,
- To get the kernel from the shell;
- Or maggots a way out to win,
- When all is gone that grew within;
- And be the key-holes eer so high,
- Rush poles a ladder's help supply.
- Where soft the climbers fearless tread,
- On spindles made of spiders' thread.
- And foul, or fair, or dark the night,
- Their wild-fire lamps are burning bright:
- For which full many a daring crime
- Is acted in the summer-time;--
- When glow-worm found in lanes remote
- Is murdered for its shining coat,
- And put in flowers, that nature weaves
- With hollow shapes and silken leaves,
- Such as the Canterbury bell,
- Serving for lamp or lantern well;
- Or, following with unwearied watch
- The flight of one they cannot match,
- As silence sliveth upon sleep,
- Or thieves by dozing watch-dogs creep,
- They steal from Jack-a-Lantern's tails
- A light, whose guidance never fails
- To aid them in the darkest night
- And guide their plundering steps aright.
- Rattling away in printless tracks,
- Some, housed on beetles' glossy backs,
- Go whisking on--and others hie
- As fast as loaded moths can fly:
- Some urge, the morning cock to shun,
- The hardest gallop mice can run,
- In chariots, lolling at their ease,
- Made of whateer their fancies please;--
- Things that in childhood's memory dwell--
- Scooped crow-pot-stone, or cockle-shell,
- With wheels at hand of mallow seeds,
- Where childish sport was stringing beads;
- And thus equipped, they softly pass
- Like shadows on the summer-grass,
- And glide away in troops together
- Just as the Spring-wind drives a feather.
- As light as happy dreams they creep,
- Nor break the feeblest link of sleep:
- A midge, if in their road a-bed,
- Feels not the wheels run oer his head,
- But sleeps till sunrise calls him up,
- Unconscious of the passing troop,--
- Thus dame the winter-night regales
- With wonder's never-ceasing tales;
- While in a corner, ill at ease,
- Or crushing tween their father's knees,
- The children--silent all the while--
- And een repressed the laugh or smile--
- Quake with the ague chills of fear,
- And tremble though they love to hear;
- Starting, while they the tales recall,
- At their own shadows on the wall:
- Till the old clock, that strikes unseen
- Behind the picture-pasted screen
- Where Eve and Adam still agree
- To rob Life's fatal apple-tree,
- Counts over bed-time's hour of rest,
- And bids each be sleep's fearful guest.
- She then her half-told tales will leave
- To finish on to-morrow's eve;--
- The children steal away to bed,
- And up the ladder softly tread;
- Scarce daring--from their fearful joys--
- To look behind or make a noise;
- Nor speak a word! but still as sleep
- They secret to their pillows creep,
- And whisper oer, in terror's way,
- The prayers they dare no louder say;
- Then hide their heads beneath the clothes,
- And try in vain to seek repose:
- While yet, to fancy's sleepless eye,
- Witches on sheep-trays gallop by,
- And fairies, like a rising spark,
- Swarm twittering round them in the dark;
- Till sleep creeps nigh to ease their cares,
- And drops upon them unawares.
- _November_
- The landscape sleeps in mist from morn till noon;
- And, if the sun looks through, tis with a face
- Beamless and pale and round, as if the moon,
- When done the journey of her nightly race,
- Had found him sleeping, and supplied his place.
- For days the shepherds in the fields may be,
- Nor mark a patch of sky--blindfold they trace,
- The plains, that seem without a bush or tree,
- Whistling aloud by guess, to flocks they cannot see.
- The timid hare seems half its fears to lose,
- Crouching and sleeping neath its grassy lair,
- And scarcely startles, though the shepherd goes
- Close by its home, and dogs are barking there;
- The wild colt only turns around to stare
- At passer by, then knaps his hide again;
- And moody crows beside the road forbear
- To fly, though pelted by the passing swain;
- Thus day seems turned to night, and tries to wake in vain.
- The owlet leaves her hiding-place at noon,
- And flaps her grey wings in the doubling light;
- The hoarse jay screams to see her out so soon,
- And small birds chirp and startle with affright;
- Much doth it scare the superstitious wight,
- Who dreams of sorry luck, and sore dismay;
- While cow-boys think the day a dream of night,
- And oft grow fearful on their lonely way,
- Fancying that ghosts may wake, and leave their graves by day.
- Yet but awhile the slumbering weather flings
- Its murky prison round--then winds wake loud;
- With sudden stir the startled forest sings
- Winter's returning song-cloud races cloud.
- And the horizon throws away its shroud,
- Sweeping a stretching circle from the eye;
- Storms upon storms in quick succession crowd,
- And oer the sameness of the purple sky
- Heaven paints, with hurried hand, wild hues of every dye.
- At length it comes among the forest oaks,
- With sobbing ebbs, and uproar gathering high;
- The scared, hoarse raven on its cradle croaks,
- And stockdove-flocks in hurried terrors fly,
- While the blue hawk hangs oer them in the sky.--
- The hedger hastens from the storm begun,
- To seek a shelter that may keep him dry;
- And foresters low bent, the wind to shun,
- Scarce hear amid the strife the poacher's muttering gun.
- The ploughman hears its humming rage begin,
- And hies for shelter from his naked toil;
- Buttoning his doublet closer to his chin,
- He bends and scampers oer the elting soil,
- While clouds above him in wild fury boil,
- And winds drive heavily the beating rain;
- He turns his back to catch his breath awhile,
- Then ekes his speed and faces it again,
- To seek the shepherd's hut beside the rushy plain.
- The boy, that scareth from the spiry wheat
- The melancholy crow--in hurry weaves,
- Beneath an ivied tree, his sheltering seat,
- Of rushy flags and sedges tied in sheaves,
- Or from the field a shock of stubble thieves.
- There he doth dithering sit, and entertain
- His eyes with marking the storm-driven leaves;
- Oft spying nests where he spring eggs had ta'en,
- And wishing in his heart twas summer-time again.
- Thus wears the month along, in checkered moods,
- Sunshine and shadows, tempests loud, and calms;
- One hour dies silent oer the sleepy woods,
- The next wakes loud with unexpected storms;
- A dreary nakedness the field deforms--
- Yet many a rural sound, and rural sight,
- Lives in the village still about the farms,
- Where toil's rude uproar hums from morn till night
- Noises, in which the ears of industry delight.
- At length the stir of rural labour's still,
- And industry her care awhile foregoes;
- When winter comes in earnest to fulfil
- His yearly task, at bleak November's close,
- And stops the plough, and hides the field in snows;
- When frost locks up the stream in chill delay
- And mellows on the hedge the jetty sloes,
- For little birds--then toil hath time for play,
- And nought but threshers' flails awake the dreary day.
- _The Fens_
- Wandering by the river's edge,
- I love to rustle through the sedge
- And through the woods of reed to tear
- Almost as high as bushes are.
- Yet, turning quick with shudder chill,
- As danger ever does from ill,
- Fear's moment ague quakes the blood,
- While plop the snake coils in the flood
- And, hissing with a forked tongue,
- Across the river winds along.
- In coat of orange, green, and blue
- Now on a willow branch I view,
- Grey waving to the sunny gleam,
- Kingfishers watch the ripple stream
- For little fish that nimble bye
- And in the gravel shallows lie.
- Eddies run before the boats,
- Gurgling where the fisher floats,
- Who takes advantage of the gale
- And hoists his handkerchief for sail
- On osier twigs that form a mast--
- While idly lies, nor wanted more,
- The spirit that pushed him on before.
- There's not a hill in all the view,
- Save that a forked cloud or two
- Upon the verge of distance lies
- And into mountains cheats the eyes.
- And as to trees the willows wear
- Lopped heads as high as bushes are;
- Some taller things the distance shrouds
- That may be trees or stacks or clouds
- Or may be nothing; still they wear
- A semblance where there's nought to spare.
- Among the tawny tasselled reed
- The ducks and ducklings float and feed.
- With head oft dabbing in the flood
- They fish all day the weedy mud,
- And tumbler-like are bobbing there,
- Heels topsy turvy in the air.
- The geese in troops come droving up,
- Nibble the weeds, and take a sup;
- And, closely puzzled to agree,
- Chatter like gossips over tea.
- The gander with his scarlet nose
- When strife's at height will interpose;
- And, stretching neck to that and this,
- With now a mutter, now a hiss,
- A nibble at the feathers too,
- A sort of "pray be quiet do,"
- And turning as the matter mends,
- He stills them into mutual friends;
- Then in a sort of triumph sings
- And throws the water oer his wings.
- Ah, could I see a spinney nigh,
- A puddock riding in the sky
- Above the oaks with easy sail
- On stilly wings and forked tail,
- Or meet a heath of furze in flower,
- I might enjoy a quiet hour,
- Sit down at rest, and walk at ease,
- And find a many things to please.
- But here my fancy's moods admire
- The naked levels till they tire,
- Nor een a molehill cushion meet
- To rest on when I want a seat.
- Here's little save the river scene
- And grounds of oats in rustling green
- And crowded growth of wheat and beans,
- That with the hope of plenty leans
- And cheers the farmer's gazing brow,
- Who lives and triumphs in the plough--
- One sometimes meets a pleasant sward
- Of swarthy grass; and quickly marred
- The plough soon turns it into brown,
- And, when again one rambles down
- The path, small hillocks burning lie
- And smoke beneath a burning sky.
- Green paddocks have but little charms
- With gain the merchandise of farms;
- And, muse and marvel where we may,
- Gain mars the landscape every day--
- The meadow grass turned up and copt,
- The trees to stumpy dotterels lopt,
- The hearth with fuel to supply
- For rest to smoke and chatter bye;
- Giving the joy of home delights,
- The warmest mirth on coldest nights.
- And so for gain, that joy's repay,
- Change cheats the landscape every day,
- Nor trees nor bush about it grows
- That from the hatchet can repose,
- And the horizon stooping smiles
- Oer treeless fens of many miles.
- Spring comes and goes and comes again
- And all is nakedness and fen.
- _Spear Thistle_
- Where the broad sheepwalk bare and brown
- [Yields] scant grass pining after showers,
- And winds go fanning up and down
- The little strawy bents and nodding flowers,
- There the huge thistle, spurred with many thorns,
- The suncrackt upland's russet swells adorns.
- Not undevoid of beauty there they come,
- Armed warriors, waiting neither suns nor showers,
- Guarding the little clover plots to bloom
- While sheep nor oxen dare not crop their flowers
- Unsheathing their own knobs of tawny flowers
- When summer cometh in her hottest hours.
- The pewit, swopping up and down
- And screaming round the passer bye,
- Or running oer the herbage brown
- With copple crown uplifted high,
- Loves in its clumps to make a home
- Where danger seldom cares to come.
- The yellowhammer, often prest
- For spot to build and be unseen,
- Will in its shelter trust her nest
- When fields and meadows glow with green;
- And larks, though paths go closely bye,
- Will in its shade securely lie.
- The partridge too, that scarce can trust
- The open downs to be at rest,
- Will in its clumps lie down, and dust
- And prune its horseshoe-circled breast,
- And oft in shining fields of green
- Will lay and raise its brood unseen.
- The sheep when hunger presses sore
- May nip the clover round its nest;
- But soon the thistle wounding sore
- Relieves it from each brushing guest,
- That leaves a bit of wool behind,
- The yellowhammer loves to find.
- The horse will set his foot and bite
- Close to the ground lark's guarded nest
- And snort to meet the prickly sight;
- He fans the feathers of her breast--
- Yet thistles prick so deep that he
- Turns back and leaves her dwelling free.
- Its prickly knobs the dews of morn
- Doth bead with dressing rich to see,
- When threads doth hang from thorn to thorn
- Like the small spinner's tapestry;
- And from the flowers a sultry smell
- Comes that agrees with summer well.
- The bee will make its bloom a bed,
- The humble bee in tawny brown;
- And one in jacket fringed with red
- Will rest upon its velvet down
- When overtaken in the rain,
- And wait till sunshine comes again.
- And there are times when travel goes
- Along the sheep tracks' beaten ways,
- Then pleasure many a praise bestows
- Upon its blossoms' pointed rays,
- When other things are parched beside
- And hot day leaves it in its pride.
- _Idle Fame_
- I would not wish the burning blaze
- Of fame around a restless world,
- The thunder and the storm of praise
- In crowded tumults heard and hurled.
- I would not be a flower to stand
- The stare of every passer-bye;
- But in some nook of fairyland,
- Seen in the praise of beauty's eye.
- _Approaching Night_
- O take this world away from me;
- Its strife I cannot bear to see,
- Its very praises hurt me more
- Than een its coldness did before,
- Its hollow ways torment me now
- And start a cold sweat on my brow,
- Its noise I cannot bear to hear,
- Its joy is trouble to my ear,
- Its ways I cannot bear to see,
- Its crowds are solitudes to me.
- O, how I long to be agen
- That poor and independent man,
- With labour's lot from morn to night
- And books to read at candle light;
- That followed labour in the field
- From light to dark when toil could yield
- Real happiness with little gain,
- Rich thoughtless health unknown to pain:
- Though, leaning on my spade to rest,
- I've thought how richer folks were blest
- And knew not quiet was the best.
- Go with your tauntings, go;
- Neer think to hurt me so;
- I'll scoff at your disdain.
- Cold though the winter blow,
- When hills are free from snow
- It will be spring again.
- So go, and fare thee well,
- Nor think ye'll have to tell
- Of wounded hearts from me,
- Locked up in your hearts cell.
- Mine still at home doth dwell
- In its first liberty.
- Bees sip not at one flower,
- Spring comes not with one shower,
- Nor shines the sun alone
- Upon one favoured hour,
- But with unstinted power
- Makes every day his own.
- And for my freedom's sake
- With such I'll pattern take,
- And rove and revel on.
- Your gall shall never make
- Me honied paths forsake;
- So prythee get thee gone.
- And when my toil is blest
- And I find a maid possest
- Of truth that's not in thee,
- Like bird that finds its nest
- I'll stop and take my rest;
- And love as she loves me.
- _Farewell and Defiance to Love_
- Love and thy vain employs, away
- From this too oft deluded breast!
- No longer will I court thy stay,
- To be my bosom's teazing guest.
- Thou treacherous medicine, reckoned pure,
- Thou quackery of the harassed heart,
- That kills what it pretends to cure,
- Life's mountebank thou art.
- With nostrums vain of boasted powers,
- That, ta'en, a worse disorder leave;
- An asp hid in a group of flowers,
- That bites and stings when few perceive;
- Thou mock-truce to the troubled mind,
- Leading it more in sorrow's way,
- Freedom, that leaves us more confined,
- I bid thee hence away.
- Dost taunt, and deem thy power beyond
- The resolution reason gave?
- Tut! Falsity hath snapt each bond,
- That kept me once thy quiet slave,
- And made thy snare a spider's thread,
- Which een my breath can break in twain;
- Nor will I be, like Sampson, led
- To trust thy wiles again.
- I took thee as my staff to guide
- Me on the road I did pursue,
- And when my weakness most relied
- Upon its strength it broke in two.
- I took thee as my friendly host
- That counsel might in dangers show,
- But when I needed thee the most
- I found thou wert my foe.
- Tempt me no more with rosy cheeks,
- Nor daze my reason with bright eyes;
- I'm wearied with thy painted freaks,
- And sicken at such vanities:
- Be roses fine as eer they will,
- They, with the meanest, fade and die,
- And eyes, though thronged with darts to kill,
- Share like mortality.
- Feed the young bard, that madly sips
- His nectar-draughts from folly's flowers,
- Bright eyes, fair cheeks, and ruby lips,
- Till muses melt to honey showers;
- Lure him to thrum thy empty lays,
- While flattery listens to the chimes,
- Till words themselves grow sick with praise
- And stop for want of rhymes.
- Let such be still thy paramours,
- And chaunt love's old and idle tune,
- Robbing the spring of all its flowers,
- And heaven of all her stars and moon,
- To gild with dazzling similes
- Blind folly's vain and empty lay:
- I'm sobered from such phantasies,
- So get thee hence away.
- Nor bid me sigh for mine own cost,
- Nor count its loss, for mine annoy,
- Nor say my stubbornness hath lost
- A paradise of dainty joy:
- I'll not believe thee, till I know
- That sober reason turns an ape,
- And acts the harlequin, to show
- That cares in every shape,
- Heart-achings, sighs, and grief-wrung tears,
- Shame-blushes at betrayed distress,
- Dissembled smiles, and jealous fears,
- Are nought but real happiness:
- Then will I mourn what now I brave,
- And suffer Celia's quirks to be
- (Like a poor fate-bewilder'd slave,)
- The rulers of my destiny.
- I'll weep and sigh wheneer she wills
- To frown, and when she deigns to smile
- It shall be cure for all my ills,
- And, foolish still, I'll laugh the while;
- But till that comes, I'll bless the rules
- Experience taught, and deem it wise
- To hold thee as the game of fools,
- And all thy tricks despise.
- _To John Milton_
- _"From his honoured friend, William Davenant"_
- Poet of mighty power, I fain
- Would court the muse that honoured thee,
- And, like Elisha's spirit, gain
- A part of thy intensity;
- And share the mantle which she flung
- Around thee, when thy lyre was strung.
- Though faction's scorn at first did shun
- With coldness thy inspired song,
- Though clouds of malice passed thy sun,
- They could not hide it long;
- Its brightness soon exhaled away
- Dank night, and gained eternal day.
- The critics' wrath did darkly frown
- Upon thy muse's mighty lay;
- But blasts that break the blossom down
- Do only stir the bay;
- And thine shall flourish, green and long,
- With the eternity of song.
- Thy genius saw, in quiet mood,
- Gilt fashion's follies pass thee by,
- And, like the monarch of the wood,
- Towered oer it to the sky,
- Where thou couldst sing of other spheres,
- And feel the fame of future years.
- Though bitter sneers and stinging scorns
- Did throng the muse's dangerous way,
- Thy powers were past such little thorns,
- They gave thee no dismay;
- The scoffer's insult passed thee by,
- Thou smild'st and mad'st him no reply.
- Envy will gnaw its heart away
- To see thy genius gather root;
- And as its flowers their sweets display
- Scorn's malice shall be mute;
- Hornets that summer warmed to fly,
- Shall at the death of summer die.
- Though friendly praise hath but its hour.
- And little praise with thee hath been;
- The bay may lose its summer flower,
- But still its leaves are green;
- And thine, whose buds are on the shoot,
- Shall only fade to change to fruit.
- Fame lives not in the breath of words,
- In public praises' hue and cry;
- The music of these summer birds
- Is silent in a winter sky,
- When thine shall live and flourish on,
- Oer wrecks where crowds of fames are gone.
- The ivy shuns the city wall,
- When busy clamorous crowds intrude,
- And climbs the desolated hall
- In silent solitude;
- The time-worn arch, the fallen dome,
- Are roots for its eternal home.
- The bard his glory neer receives
- Where summer's common flowers are seen,
- But winter finds it when she leaves
- The laurel only green;
- And time from that eternal tree,
- Shall weave a wreath to honour thee;
- A sunny wreath for poets meet,
- From Helicon's immortal soil,
- Where sacred Time with pilgrim feet
- Walks forth to worship, not to spoil,
- A wreath which Fame creates and bears,
- And deathless genius only heirs.
- Nought but thy ashes shall expire;
- Thy genius, at thy obsequies,
- Shall kindle up its living fire
- And light the muse's skies;
- Ay, it shall rise, and shine, and be
- A sun in song's posterity.
- _The Vanities of Life_
- Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.--_Solomon_
- What are life's joys and gains?
- What pleasures crowd its ways,
- That man should take such pains
- To seek them all his days?
- Sift this untoward strife
- On which thy mind is bent:
- See if this chaff of life
- Is worth the trouble spent.
- Is pride thy heart's desire?
- Is power thy climbing aim?
- Is love thy folly's fire?
- Is wealth thy restless game?
- Pride, power, love, wealth, and all
- Time's touchstone shall destroy,
- And, like base coin, prove all
- Vain substitutes for joy.
- Dost think that pride exalts
- Thyself in other's eyes,
- And hides thy folly's faults,
- Which reason will despise?
- Dost strut, and turn, and stride,
- Like walking weathercocks?
- The shadow by thy side
- Becomes thy ape, and mocks.
- Dost think that power's disguise
- Can make thee mighty seem?
- It may in folly's eyes,
- But not in worth's esteem,
- When all that thou canst ask,
- And all that she can give,
- Is but a paltry mask
- Which tyrants wear and live.
- Go, let thy fancies range
- And ramble where they may;
- View power in every change,
- And what is the display?
- --The country magistrate,
- The meanest shade in power,
- To rulers of the state,
- The meteors of an hour.
- View all, and mark the end
- Of every proud extreme,
- Where flattery turns a friend,
- And counterfeits esteem;
- Where worth is aped in show,
- That doth her name purloin,
- Like toys of golden glow
- That's sold for copper coin.
- Ambition's haughty nod
- With fancies may deceive,
- Nay, tell thee thou'rt a god,
- And wilt thou such believe?
- Go, bid the seas be dry;
- Go, hold earth like a ball,
- Or throw thy fancies by,
- For God can do it all.
- Dost thou possess the dower
- Of laws to spare or kill?
- Call it not heavenly power
- When but a tyrant's will.
- Know what a God will do,
- And know thyself a fool,
- Nor, tyrant-like, pursue
- Where He alone should rule.
- O put away thy pride,
- Or be ashamed of power
- That cannot turn aside
- The breeze that waves a flower.
- Or bid the clouds be still:
- Though shadows, they can brave
- Thy poor power mocking will:
- Then make not man a slave.
- Dost think, when wealth is won,
- Thy heart has its desire?
- Hold ice up to the sun,
- And wax before the fire;
- Nor triumph oer the reign
- Which they so soon resign;
- In this world's ways they gain,
- Insurance safe as thine.
- Dost think life's peace secure
- In house and in land?
- Go, read the fairy lure
- To twist a cord in sand;
- Lodge stones upon the sky,
- Hold water in a sieve,
- Nor give such tales the lie,
- And still thine own believe.
- Whoso with riches deals,
- And thinks peace bought and sold,
- Will find them slipping eels,
- That slide the firmest hold:
- Though sweet as sleep with health
- Thy lulling luck may be,
- Pride may oerstride thy wealth,
- And check prosperity.
- Dost think that beauty's power
- Life sweetest pleasure gives?
- Go, pluck the summer flower,
- And see how long it lives:
- Behold, the rays glide on
- Along the summer plain
- Ere thou canst say "they're gone,"
- And measure beauty's reign.
- Look on the brightest eye,
- Nor teach it to be proud;
- View but the clearest sky,
- And thou shalt find a cloud;
- Nor call each face ye meet
- An angel's, cause it's fair,
- But look beneath your feet,
- And think of what they are.
- Who thinks that love doth live
- In beauty's tempting show,
- Shall find his hopes ungive,
- And melt in reason's thaw.
- Who thinks that pleasure lies
- In every fairy bower,
- Shall oft, to his surprise,
- Find poison in the flower.
- Dost lawless passions grasp?
- Judge not thou deal'st in joy:
- Its flowers but hide the asp,
- Thy revels to destroy.
- Who trusts an harlot's smile,
- And by her wiles are led,
- Plays, with a sword the while
- Hung dropping oer his head.
- Dost doubt my warning song?
- Then doubt the sun gives light,
- Doubt truth to teach thee wrong,
- And wrong alone as right;
- And live as lives the knave,
- Intrigue's deceiving guest;
- Be tyrant, or be slave,
- As suits thy ends the best.
- Or pause amid thy toils
- For visions won and lost,
- And count the fancied spoils,
- If eer they quit the cost:
- And if they still possess
- Thy mind, as worthy things,
- Plat straws with bedlam Bess,
- And call them diamond rings.
- Thy folly's past advice,
- Thy heart's already won,
- Thy fall's above all price,
- So go, and be undone;
- For all who thus prefer
- The seeming great for small
- Shall make wine vinegar,
- And sweetest honey gall.
- Wouldst heed the truths I sing,
- To profit wherewithal,
- Clip folly's wanton wing,
- And keep her within call.
- I've little else to give,
- What thou canst easy try;
- The lesson how to live
- Is but to learn to die.
- _Death_
- Why should man's high aspiring mind
- Burn in him with so proud a breath,
- When all his haughty views can find
- In this world yields to death?
- The fair, the brave, the vain, the wise,
- The rich, the poor, the great, and small,
- Are each but worm's anatomies
- To strew his quiet hall.
- Power may make many earthly gods,
- Where gold and bribery's guilt prevails,
- But death's unwelcome, honest odds
- Kick o'er the unequal scales.
- The flattered great may clamours raise
- Of power, and their own weakness hide,
- But death shall find unlooked-for ways
- To end the farce of pride,
- An arrow hurtled eer so high,
- From een a giant's sinewy strength,
- In Time's untraced eternity
- Goes but a pigmy length;
- Nay, whirring from the tortured string,
- With all its pomp of hurried flight,
- Tis by the skylark's little wing
- Outmeasured in its height.
- Just so man's boasted strength and power
- Shall fade before death's lightest stroke,
- Laid lower than the meanest flower,
- Whose pride oer-topt the oak;
- And he who, like a blighting blast,
- Dispeopled worlds with war's alarms
- Shall be himself destroyed at last
- By poor despised worms.
- Tyrants in vain their powers secure,
- And awe slaves' murmurs with a frown,
- For unawed death at last is sure
- To sap the babels down.
- A stone thrown upward to the sky
- Will quickly meet the ground agen;
- So men-gods of earth's vanity
- Shall drop at last to men;
- And Power and Pomp their all resign,
- Blood-purchased thrones and banquet halls.
- Fate waits to sack Ambition's shrine
- As bare as prison walls,
- Where the poor suffering wretch bows down
- To laws a lawless power hath passed;
- And pride, and power, and king, and clown
- Shall be Death's slaves at last.
- Time, the prime minister of Death!
- There's nought can bribe his honest will.
- He stops the richest tyrant's breath
- And lays his mischief still.
- Each wicked scheme for power all stops,
- With grandeurs false and mock display,
- As eve's shades from high mountain tops
- Fade with the rest away.
- Death levels all things in his march;
- Nought can resist his mighty strength;
- The palace proud, triumphal arch,
- Shall mete its shadow's length.
- The rich, the poor, one common bed
- Shall find in the unhonoured grave,
- Where weeds shall crown alike the head
- Of tyrant and of slave.
- _The Fallen Elm_
- Old elm, that murmured in our chimney top
- The sweetest anthem autumn ever made
- And into mellow whispering calms would drop
- When showers fell on thy many coloured shade
- And when dark tempests mimic thunder made--
- While darkness came as it would strangle light
- With the black tempest of a winter night
- That rocked thee like a cradle in thy root--
- How did I love to hear the winds upbraid
- Thy strength without--while all within was mute.
- It seasoned comfort to our hearts' desire,
- We felt thy kind protection like a friend
- And edged our chairs up closer to the fire,
- Enjoying comfort that was never penned.
- Old favourite tree, thou'st seen time's changes lower,
- Though change till now did never injure thee;
- For time beheld thee as her sacred dower
- And nature claimed thee her domestic tree.
- Storms came and shook thee many a weary hour,
- Yet stedfast to thy home thy roots have been;
- Summers of thirst parched round thy homely bower
- Till earth grew iron--still thy leaves were green.
- The children sought thee in thy summer shade
- And made their playhouse rings of stick and stone;
- The mavis sang and felt himself alone
- While in thy leaves his early nest was made.
- And I did feel his happiness mine own,
- Nought heeding that our friendship was betrayed,
- Friend not inanimate--though stocks and stones
- There are, and many formed of flesh and bones.
- Thou owned a language by which hearts are stirred
- Deeper than by a feeling clothed in word,
- And speakest now what's known of every tongue,
- Language of pity and the force of wrong.
- What cant assumes, what hypocrites will dare,
- Speaks home to truth and shows it what they are.
- I see a picture which thy fate displays
- And learn a lesson from thy destiny;
- Self-interest saw thee stand in freedom's ways--
- So thy old shadow must a tyrant be.
- Tnou'st heard the knave, abusing those in power,
- Bawl freedom loud and then oppress the free;
- Thou'st sheltered hypocrites in many a shower,
- That when in power would never shelter thee.
- Thou'st heard the knave supply his canting powers
- With wrong's illusions when he wanted friends;
- That bawled for shelter when he lived in showers
- And when clouds vanished made thy shade amends--
- With axe at root he felled thee to the ground
- And barked of freedom--O I hate the sound
- Time hears its visions speak,--and age sublime
- Hath made thee a disciple unto time.
- --It grows the cant term of enslaving tools
- To wrong another by the name of right;
- Thus came enclosure--ruin was its guide,
- But freedom's cottage soon was thrust aside
- And workhouse prisons raised upon the site.
- Een nature's dwellings far away from men,
- The common heath, became the spoiler's prey;
- The rabbit had not where to make his den
- And labour's only cow was drove away.
- No matter--wrong was right and right was wrong,
- And freedom's bawl was sanction to the song.
- --Such was thy ruin, music-making elm;
- The right of freedom was to injure thine:
- As thou wert served, so would they overwhelm
- In freedom's name the little that is mine.
- And there are knaves that brawl for better laws
- And cant of tyranny in stronger power
- Who glut their vile unsatiated maws
- And freedom's birthright from the weak devour.
- _Sport in the Meadows_
- Maytime is to the meadows coming in,
- And cowslip peeps have gotten eer so big,
- And water blobs and all their golden kin
- Crowd round the shallows by the striding brig.
- Daisies and buttercups and ladysmocks
- Are all abouten shining here and there,
- Nodding about their gold and yellow locks
- Like morts of folken flocking at a fair.
- The sheep and cows are crowding for a share
- And snatch the blossoms in such eager haste
- That basket-bearing children running there
- Do think within their hearts they'll get them all
- And hoot and drive them from their graceless waste
- As though there wa'n't a cowslip peep to spare.
- --For they want some for tea and some for wine
- And some to maken up a cuckaball
- To throw across the garland's silken line
- That reaches oer the street from wall to wall.
- --Good gracious me, how merrily they fare:
- One sees a fairer cowslip than the rest,
- And off they shout--the foremost bidding fair
- To get the prize--and earnest half and jest
- The next one pops her down--and from her hand
- Her basket falls and out her cowslips all
- Tumble and litter there--the merry band
- In laughing friendship round about her fall
- To helpen gather up the littered flowers
- That she no loss may mourn. And now the wind
- In frolic mood among the merry hours
- Wakens with sudden start and tosses off
- Some untied bonnet on its dancing wings;
- Away they follow with a scream and laugh,
- And aye the youngest ever lags behind,
- Till on the deep lake's very bank it hings.
- They shout and catch it and then off they start
- And chase for cowslips merry as before,
- And each one seems so anxious at the heart
- As they would even get them all and more.
- One climbs a molehill for a bunch of may,
- One stands on tiptoe for a linnet's nest
- And pricks her hand and throws her flowers away
- And runs for plantin leaves to have it drest.
- So do they run abouten all the day
- And teaze the grass-hid larks from getting rest.
- --Scarce give they time in their unruly haste
- To tie a shoestring that the grass unties--
- And thus they run the meadows' bloom to waste,
- Till even comes and dulls their phantasies,
- When one finds losses out to stifle smiles
- Of silken bonnet-strings--and utters sigh
- Oer garments renten clambering over stiles.
- Yet in the morning fresh afield they hie,
- Bidding the last day's troubles all goodbye;
- When red pied cow again their coming hears,
- And ere they clap the gate she tosses up
- Her head and hastens from the sport she fears:
- The old yoe calls her lamb nor cares to stoop
- To crop a cowslip in their company.
- Thus merrily the little noisy troop
- Along the grass as rude marauders hie,
- For ever noisy and for ever gay
- While keeping in the meadows holiday.
- _Death_
- The winds and waters are in his command,
- Held as a courser in the rider's hand.
- He lets them loose, they triumph at his will:
- He checks their course and all is calm and still.
- Life's hopes waste all to nothingness away
- As showers at night wash out the steps of day.
- * * * * *
- The tyrant, in his lawless power deterred,
- Bows before death, tame as a broken sword.
- One dyeth in his strength and, torn from ease,
- Groans in death pangs like tempests in the trees.
- Another from the bitterness of clay
- Falls calm as storms drop on an autumn day,
- With noiseless speed as swift as summer light
- Death slays and keeps her weapons out of sight.
- The tyrants that do act the God in clay
- And for earth's glories throw the heavens away,
- Whose breath in power did like to thunder sear,
- When anger hurried on the heels of fear,
- Whose rage planned hosts of murders at a breath--
- Here in sound silence sheath their rage in death.
- Their feet, that crushed down freedom to its grave
- And felt the very earth they trod a slave,
- How quiet here they lie in death's cold arms
- Without the power to crush the feeble worms
- Who spite of all the dreadful fears they made
- Creep there to conquer and are not afraid.
- _Autumn_
- Syren of sullen moods and fading hues,
- Yet haply not incapable of joy,
- Sweet Autumn! I thee hail
- With welcome all unfeigned;
- And oft as morning from her lattice peeps
- To beckon up the sun, I seek with thee
- To drink the dewy breath
- Of fields left fragrant then,
- In solitudes, where no frequented paths
- But what thy own foot makes betray thy home,
- Stealing obtrusive there
- To meditate thy end:
- By overshadowed ponds, in woody nooks,
- With ramping sallows lined, and crowding sedge,
- Which woo the winds to play,
- And with them dance for joy;
- And meadow pools, torn wide by lawless floods,
- Where water-lilies spread their oily leaves,
- On which, as wont, the fly
- Oft battens in the sun;
- Where leans the mossy willow half way oer,
- On which the shepherd crawls astride to throw
- His angle, clear of weeds
- That crowd the water's brim;
- Or crispy hills, and hollows scant of sward,
- Where step by step the patient lonely boy
- Hath cut rude flights of stairs
- To climb their steepy sides;
- Then track along their feet, grown hoarse with noise,
- The crawling brook, that ekes its weary speed,
- And struggles through the weeds
- With faint and sullen brawl.
- These haunts I long have favoured, more as now
- With thee thus wandering, moralizing on,
- Stealing glad thoughts from grief,
- And happy, though I sigh.
- Sweet Vision, with the wild dishevelled hair,
- And raiment shadowy of each wind's embrace,
- Fain would I win thine harp
- To one accordant theme;
- Now not inaptly craved, communing thus,
- Beneath the curdled arms of this stunt oak,
- While pillowed on the grass,
- We fondly ruminate
- Oer the disordered scenes of woods and fields,
- Ploughed lands, thin travelled with half-hungry sheep,
- Pastures tracked deep with cows,
- Where small birds seek for seed:
- Marking the cow-boy that so merry trills
- His frequent, unpremeditated song,
- Wooing the winds to pause,
- Till echo brawls again;
- As on with plashy step, and clouted shoon,
- He roves, half indolent and self-employed,
- To rob the little birds
- Of hips and pendent haws,
- And sloes, dim covered as with dewy veils,
- And rambling bramble-berries, pulp and sweet,
- Arching their prickly trails
- Half oer the narrow lane:
- Noting the hedger front with stubborn face
- The dank blea wind, that whistles thinly by
- His leathern garb, thorn proof,
- And cheek red hot with toil.
- While oer the pleachy lands of mellow brown,
- The mower's stubbling scythe clogs to his foot
- The ever eking whisp,
- With sharp and sudden jerk,
- Till into formal rows the russet shocks
- Crowd the blank field to thatch time-weathered barns,
- And hovels rude repair,
- Stript by disturbing winds.
- See! from the rustling scythe the haunted hare
- Scampers circuitous, with startled ears
- Prickt up, then squat, as bye
- She brushes to the woods,
- Where reeded grass, breast-high and undisturbed,
- Forms pleasant clumps, through which the soothing winds
- Soften her rigid fears,
- And lull to calm repose.
- Wild sorceress! me thy restless mood delights,
- More than the stir of summer's crowded scenes,
- Where, jostled in the din,
- Joy palled my ear with song;
- Heart-sickening for the silence that is thine,
- Not broken inharmoniously, as now
- That lone and vagrant bee
- Booms faint with wearp chime.
- Now filtering winds thin winnow through the woods
- In tremulous noise, that bids, at every breath,
- Some sickly cankered leaf
- Let go its hold, and die.
- And now the bickering storm, with sudden start,
- In flirting fits of anger carps aloud,
- Thee urging to thine end,
- Sore wept by troubled skies.
- And yet, sublime in grief, thy thoughts delight
- To show me visions of most gorgeous dyes,
- Haply forgetting now
- They but prepare thy shroud;
- Thy pencil dashing its excess of shades,
- Improvident of waste, till every bough
- Burns with thy mellow touch
- Disorderly divine.
- Soon must I view thee as a pleasant dream
- Droop faintly, and so sicken for thine end,
- As sad the winds sink low
- In dirges for their queen;
- While in the moment of their weary pause,
- To cheer thy bankrupt pomp, the willing lark
- Starts from his shielding clod,
- Snatching sweet scraps of song.
- Thy life is waning now, and silence tries
- To mourn, but meets no sympathy in sounds.
- As stooping low she bends,
- Forming with leaves thy grave;
- To sleep inglorious there mid tangled woods,
- Till parch-lipped summer pines in drought away,
- Then from thine ivied trance
- Awake to glories new.
- Summer Images
- Now swarthy summer, by rude health embrowned,
- Precedence takes of rosy fingered spring;
- And laughing joy, with wild flowers pranked and crowned,
- A wild and giddy thing,
- And health robust, from every care unbound,
- Come on the zephyr's wing,
- And cheer the toiling clown.
- Happy as holiday-enjoying face,
- Loud tongued, and "merry as a marriage bell,"
- Thy lightsome step sheds joy in every place;
- And where the troubled dwell,
- Thy witching smiles wean them of half their cares;
- And from thy sunny spell,
- They greet joy unawares.
- Then with thy sultry locks all loose and rude,
- And mantle laced with gems of garish light,
- Come as of wont; for I would fain intrude,
- And in the world's despite,
- Share the rude mirth that thy own heart beguiles:
- If haply so I might
- Win pleasure from thy smiles,
- Me not the noise of brawling pleasure cheers,
- In nightly revels or in city streets;
- But joys which soothe, and not distract the ears,
- That one at leisure meets
- In the green woods, and meadows summer-shorn,
- Or fields, where bee-fly greets
- The ears with mellow horn.
- The green-swathed grasshopper, on treble pipe,
- Sings there, and dances, in mad-hearted pranks;
- There bees go courting every flower that's ripe,
- On baulks and sunny banks;
- And droning dragon-fly, on rude bassoon,
- Attempts to give God thanks
- In no discordant tune.
- There speckled thrush, by self-delight embued,
- There sings unto himself for joy's amends,
- And drinks the honey dew of solitude.
- There happiness attends
- With inbred joy until the heart oerflow,
- Of which the world's rude friends,
- Nought heeding, nothing know.
- There the gay river, laughing as it goes,
- Plashes with easy wave its flaggy sides,
- And to the calm of heart, in calmness shows
- What pleasure there abides,
- To trace its sedgy banks, from trouble free:
- Spots solitude provides
- To muse, and happy be.
- There ruminating neath some pleasant bush,
- On sweet silk grass I stretch me at mine ease,
- Where I can pillow on the yielding rush;
- And, acting as I please,
- Drop into pleasant dreams; or musing lie,
- Mark the wind-shaken trees,
- And cloud-betravelled sky.
- And think me how some barter joy for care,
- And waste life's summer-health in riot rude,
- Of nature, nor of nature's sweets aware;
- Where passions vain and rude
- By calm reflection, softened are and still;
- And the heart's better mood
- Feels sick of doing ill.
- There I can live, and at my leisure seek
- Joys far from cold restraints--not fearing pride--
- Free as the winds, that breathe upon my cheek
- Rude health, so long denied.
- Here poor integrity can sit at ease,
- And list self-satisfied
- The song of honey-bees;
- And green lane traverse heedless where it goes
- Nought guessing, till some sudden turn espies
- Rude battered finger post, that stooping shows
- Where the snug mystery lies;
- And then a mossy spire, with ivy crown,
- Clears up the short surprise,
- And shows a peeping town.
- I see the wild flowers, in their summer morn
- Of beauty, feeding on joy's luscious hours;
- The gay convolvulus, wreathing round the thorn,
- Agape for honey showers;
- And slender kingcup, burnished with the dew
- Of morning's early hours,
- Like gold yminted new;
- And mark by rustic bridge, oer shallow stream,
- Cow-tending boy, to toil unreconciled,
- Absorbed as in some vagrant summer dream;
- Who now, in gestures wild,
- Starts dancing to his shadow on the wall,
- Feeling self-gratified,
- Nor fearing human thrall:
- Then thread the sunny valley laced with streams,
- Or forests rude, and the oershadowed brims
- Of simple ponds, where idle shepherd dreams,
- And streaks his listless limbs;
- Or trace hay-scented meadows, smooth and long,
- Where joy's wild impulse swims
- In one continued song.
- I love at early morn, from new mown swath,
- To see the startled frog his route pursue;
- To mark while, leaping oer the dripping path,
- His bright sides scatter dew,
- The early lark that, from its bustle flies,
- To hail his matin new;
- And watch him to the skies:
- To note on hedgerow baulks, in moisture sprent,
- The jetty snail creep from the mossy thorn,
- With earnest heed, and tremulous intent,
- Frail brother of the morn,
- That from the tiny bents and misted leaves
- Withdraws his timid horn,
- And fearful vision weaves:
- Or swallow heed on smoke-tanned chimney top,
- Wont to be first unsealing morning's eye,
- Ere yet the bee hath gleaned one wayward drop
- Of honey on his thigh;
- To see him seek morn's airy couch to sing,
- Until the golden sky
- Bepaint his russet wing:
- And sawning boy by tanning corn espy,
- With clapping noise to startle birds away,
- And hear him bawl to every passer by
- To know the hour of day;
- And see the uncradled breeze, refreshed and strong,
- With waking blossoms play,
- And breathe eolian song.
- I love the south-west wind, or low or loud,
- And not the less when sudden drops of rain
- Moisten my pallid cheek from ebon cloud,
- Threatening soft showers again,
- That over lands new ploughed and meadow grounds,
- Summer's sweet breath unchain,
- And wake harmonious sounds.
- Rich music breathes in summer's every sound;
- And in her harmony of varied greens,
- Woods, meadows, hedge-rows, corn-fields, all around
- Much beauty intervenes,
- Filling with harmony the ear and eye;
- While oer the mingling scenes
- Far spreads the laughing sky.
- And wind-enamoured aspin--mark the leaves
- Turn up their silver lining to the sun,
- And list! the brustling noise, that oft deceives,
- And makes the sheep-boy run;
- The sound so mimics fast-approaching showers,
- He thinks the rain begun,
- And hastes to sheltering bowers.
- But now the evening curdles dank and grey,
- Changing her watchet hue for sombre weed;
- And moping owls, to close the lids of day,
- On drowsy wing proceed;
- While chickering crickets, tremulous and long,
- Light's farewell inly heed,
- And give it parting song.
- The pranking bat its nighty circlet makes;
- The glow-worm burnishes its lamp anew
- Oer meadows dew-besprent; and beetle wakes
- Enquiries ever new,
- Teazing each passing ear with murmurs vain,
- As wanting to pursue
- His homeward path again.
- Hark to the melody of distant bells
- That on the wind with pleasing hum rebounds
- By fitful starts, then musically swells
- Oer the dun stilly grounds;
- While on the meadow bridge the pausing boy
- Listens the mellow sounds,
- And hums in vacant joy.
- Now homeward-bound, the hedger bundles round
- His evening faggot, and with every stride
- His leathern doublet leaves a rustling sound.
- Till silly sheep beside
- His path start tremulous, and once again
- Look back dissatisfied,
- Then scour the dewy plain.
- How sweet the soothing calm that smoothly stills
- Oer the heart's every sense its opiate dews,
- In meek-eyed moods and ever balmy trills!
- That softens and subdues,
- With gentle quiet's bland and sober train,
- Which dreamy eve renews
- In many a mellow strain.
- I love to walk the fields, they are to me
- A legacy no evil can destroy;
- They, like a spell, set every rapture free
- That cheered me when a boy.
- Play--pastime--all time's blotting pen concealed,
- Comes like a new-born joy,
- To greet me in the field.
- For nature's objects ever harmonize
- With emulous taste, that vulgar deed annoys;
- It loves in quiet moods to sympathize,
- And meet vibrating joys
- Oer nature's pleasant things; nor will it deem
- Pastime the muse employs
- A vain obtrusive theme.
- _A World for Love_
- Oh, the world is all too rude for thee, with much ado and care;
- Oh, this world is but a rude world, and hurts a thing so fair;
- Was there a nook in which the world had never been to sear,
- That place would prove a paradise when thou and Love were near.
- And there to pluck the blackberry, and there to reach the sloe,
- How joyously and happily would Love thy partner go;
- Then rest when weary on a bank, where not a grassy blade
- Had eer been bent by Trouble's feet, and Love thy pillow made.
- For Summer would be ever green, though sloes were in their prime,
- And Winter smile his frowns to Spring, in beauty's happy clime;
- And months would come, and months would go, and all in sunny mood,
- And everything inspired by thee grow beautifully good.
- And there to make a cot unknown to any care and pain,
- And there to shut the door alone on singing wind and rain--
- Far, far away from all the world, more rude than rain or wind,
- Oh, who could wish a sweeter home, or better place to find?
- Than thus to love and live with thee, thou beautiful delight!
- Than thus to live and love with thee the summer day and night!
- The Earth itself, where thou hadst rest, would surely smile to see
- Herself grow Eden once again, possest of Love and thee.
- _Love_
- Love, though it is not chill and cold,
- But burning like eternal fire,
- Is yet not of approaches bold,
- Which gay dramatic tastes admire.
- Oh timid love, more fond than free,
- In daring song is ill pourtrayed,
- Where, as in war, the devotee
- By valour wins each captive maid;--
- Where hearts are prest to hearts in glee,
- As they could tell each other's mind;
- Where ruby lips are kissed as free,
- As flowers are by the summer wind.
- No! gentle love, that timid dream,
- With hopes and fears at foil and play,
- Works like a skiff against the stream,
- And thinking most finds least to say.
- It lives in blushes and in sighs,
- In hopes for which no words are found;
- Thoughts dare not speak but in the eyes,
- The tongue is left without a sound.
- The pert and forward things that dare
- Their talk in every maiden's ear,
- Feel no more than their shadows there--
- Mere things of form, with nought of fear.
- True passion, that so burns to plead,
- Is timid as the dove's disguise;
- Tis for the murder-aiming gleed
- To dart at every thing that flies.
- True love, it is no daring bird,
- But like the little timid wren,
- That in the new-leaved thorns of spring
- Shrinks farther from the sight of men.
- The idol of his musing mind,
- The worship of his lonely hour,
- Love woos her in the summer wind,
- And tells her name to every flower;
- But in her sight, no open word
- Escapes, his fondness to declare;
- The sighs by beauty's magic stirred
- Are all that speak his passion there.
- _Nature's Hymn to the Deity_
- All nature owns with one accord
- The great and universal Lord:
- The sun proclaims him through the day,
- The moon when daylight drops away,
- The very darkness smiles to wear
- The stars that show us God is there,
- On moonlight seas soft gleams the sky
- And "God is with us" waves reply.
- Winds breathe from God's abode "we come,"
- Storms louder own God is their home,
- And thunder yet with louder call,
- Sounds "God is mightiest over all";
- Till earth right loath the proof to miss
- Echoes triumphantly "He is,"
- And air and ocean makes reply,
- God reigns on earth, in air and sky.
- All nature owns with one accord
- The great and universal Lord:
- Insect and bird and tree and flower--
- The witnesses of every hour--
- Are pregnant with his prophesy
- And "God is with us" all reply.
- The first link in the mighty plan
- Is still--and all upbraideth man.
- _Decay_
- O Poesy is on the wane,
- For Fancy's visions all unfitting;
- I hardly know her face again,
- Nature herself seems on the flitting.
- The fields grow old and common things,
- The grass, the sky, the winds a-blowing;
- And spots, where still a beauty clings,
- Are sighing "going! all a-going!"
- O Poesy is on the wane,
- I hardly know her face again.
- The bank with brambles overspread,
- And little molehills round about it,
- Was more to me than laurel shades,
- With paths of gravel finely clouted;
- And streaking here and streaking there,
- Through shaven grass and many a border,
- With rutty lanes had no compare,
- And heaths were in a richer order.
- But Poesy is on the wane,
- I hardly know her face again.
- I sat beside the pasture stream,
- When Beauty's self was sitting by,
- The fields did more than Eden seem
- Nor could I tell the reason why.
- I often drank when not adry
- To pledge her health in draughts divine;
- Smiles made it nectar from the sky,
- Love turned een water into wine.
- O Poesy is on the wane,
- I cannot find her face again.
- The sun those mornings used to find,
- Its clouds were other-country mountains,
- And heaven looked downward on the mind,
- Like groves, and rocks, and mottled fountains.
- Those heavens are gone, the mountains grey
- Turned mist--the sun, a homeless ranger,
- Pursues alone his naked way,
- Unnoticed like a very stranger.
- O Poesy is on the wane,
- Nor love nor joy is mine again.
- Love's sun went down without a frown,
- For very joy it used to grieve us;
- I often think the West is gone,
- Ah, cruel Time, to undeceive us.
- The stream it is a common stream,
- Where we on Sundays used to ramble,
- The sky hangs oer a broken dream,
- The bramble's dwindled to a bramble!
- O Poesy is on the wane,
- I cannot find her haunts again.
- Mere withered stalks and fading trees,
- And pastures spread with hills and rushes,
- Are all my fading vision sees;
- Gone, gone are rapture's flooding gushes!
- When mushrooms they were fairy bowers,
- Their marble pillars overswelling,
- And Danger paused to pluck the flowers
- That in their swarthy rings were dwelling.
- Yes, Poesy is on the wane,
- Nor joy nor fear is mine again.
- Aye, Poesy hath passed away,
- And Fancy's visions undeceive us;
- The night hath ta'en the place of day,
- And why should passing shadows grieve us?
- I thought the flowers upon the hills
- Were flowers from Adam's open gardens;
- But I have had my summer thrills,
- And I have had my heart's rewardings.
- So Poesy is on the wane,
- I hardly know her face again.
- And Friendship it hath burned away,
- Like to a very ember cooling,
- A make-believe on April day
- That sent the simple heart a-fooling;
- Mere jesting in an earnest way,
- Deceiving on and still deceiving;
- And Hope is but a fancy-play,
- And Joy the art of true believing;
- For Poesy is on the wane,
- O could I feel her faith again!
- _The Cellar Door_
- By the old tavern door on the causey there lay
- A hogshead of stingo just rolled from a dray,
- And there stood the blacksmith awaiting a drop
- As dry as the cinders that lay in his shop;
- And there stood the cobbler as dry as a bun,
- Almost crackt like a bucket when left in the sun.
- He'd whetted his knife upon pendil and hone
- Till he'd not got a spittle to moisten the stone;
- So ere he could work--though he'd lost the whole day--
- He must wait the new broach and bemoisten his clay.
- The cellar was empty, each barrel was drained
- To its dregs--and Sir John like a rebel remained
- In the street--for removal too powerful and large
- For two or three topers to take into charge.
- Odd zooks, said a gipsey, with bellows to mend,
- Had I strength I would just be for helping a friend
- To walk on his legs: but a child in the street
- Had as much power as he to put John on his feet.
- Then up came the blacksmith: Sir Barley, said he,
- I should just like to storm your old tower for a spree;
- And my strength for your strength and bar your renown
- I'd soon try your spirit by cracking your crown.
- And the cobbler he tuckt up his apron and spit
- In his hands for a burster--but devil a bit
- Would he move--so as yet they made nothing of land;
- For there lay the knight like a whale in the sand.
- Said the tinker: If I could but drink of his vein
- I should just be as strong and as stubborn again.
- Push along, said the toper, the cellar's adry:
- There's nothing to moisten the mouth of a fly.
- Says the host, We shall burn out with thirst, he's so big.
- There's a cag of small swipes half as sour as a wig.
- In such like extremes, why, extremes will come pat;
- So let's go and wet all our whistles with that.
- Says the gipsey, May I never bottom a chair
- If I drink of small swipes while Sir John's lying there.
- And the blacksmith he threw off his apron and swore
- Small swipes should bemoisten his gullet no more:
- Let it out on the floor for the dry cock-a-roach--
- And he held up his hammer with threatens to broach
- Sir John in his castle without leave or law
- And suck out his blood with a reed or a straw
- Ere he'd soak at the swipes--and he turned him to start,
- Till the host for high treason came down a full quart.
- Just then passed the dandy and turned up his nose:
- They'd fain have him shove, but he looked at his clothes
- And nipt his nose closer and twirled his stick round
- And simpered, Tis nuisance to lie on the ground.
- But Bacchus, he laughed from the old tavern sign,
- Saying, Go on, thou shadow, and let the sun shine.
- Then again they all tried, and the tinker he swore
- That the hogshead had grown twice as heavy or more.
- Nay nay, said the toper, and reeled as he spoke,
- We're all getting weak, that's the end of the joke.
- The ploughman came up and cut short his old tune,
- Hallooed "woi" to his horses and though it was June
- Said he'd help them an hour ere he'd keep them adry;
- Well done, said the blacksmith with hopes running high;
- He moves, and, by jingo, success to the plough!
- Aye aye, said the cobbler, we'll conquer him now.
- The hogshead rolled forward, the toper fell back,
- And the host laughed aloud as his sides they would crack
- To see the old tinker's toil make such a gap
- In his coat as to rend it from collar to flap.
- But the tinker he grumbled and cried Fiddle-dee!
- This garment hath been an old tenant with me;
- And a needle and thread with a little good skill
- When I've leisure will make it stand more weathers still.
- Then crack went his breeks from the hip to the knee
- With his thrusting--no matter; for nothing cared he.
- So long as Sir John rolled along to the door,
- He's a chip of our block, said the blacksmith, and swore;
- And as sure as I live to drive nails in a shoe
- He shall have at my cost a full pitcher or two.
- And the toper he hiccuped--which hindered an oath--
- So long as he'd credit, he'd pitcher them both.
- But the host stopt to hint when he'd ordered the dray
- Sir Barleycorn's order was purchase and pay.
- And now the old knight is imprisoned and ta'en
- To waste in the tavern man's cellar again.
- And now, said the blacksmith, let forfeits come first
- For the insult swipes offered, or his hoops I will burst.
- Here it is, my old hearties--Then drink your thirst full,
- Said the host, for the stingo is worth a strong pull.
- Never fear for your legs if they're broken to-day;
- Winds only blow straws, dust, and feathers away.
- But the cask that is full, like a giant he lies,
- And giants alone can his spirits capsize.
- If he lies in the path, though a king's coming bye,
- John Barleycorn's mighty and there he will lie.
- Then the toper sat down with a hiccup and felt
- If he'd still an odd coin in his pocket to melt,
- And he made a wry face, for his pocket was bare.
- --But he laughed and danced up, What, old boy, are you there?
- When he felt that a stiver had got to his knee
- Through a hole in his fob, and right happy was he.
- Says the tinker, I've brawled till no breath I have got
- And not met with twopence to purchase a pot.
- Says the toper, I've powder to charge a long gun,
- And a stiver I've found when I thought I'd got none;
- So helping a thirsty old friend in his need
- Is my duty--take heart, thou art welcome indeed.
- Then the smith with his tools in Sir John made a breach,
- And the toper he hiccuped and ended his speech;
- And pulled at the quart, till the snob he declared
- When he went to drink next that the bottom was bared.
- No matter for that, said the toper, and grinned;
- I had but a soak and neer rested for wind.
- That's the law, said the smith, with a look rather vexed,
- But the quart was a forfeit; so pay for the next.
- Thus they talked of their skill and their labour till noon
- When the sober man's toil was exactly half done,
- And there the plough lay--people hardly could pass
- And the horses let loose polished up the short grass
- And browsed on the bottle of flags lying there,
- By the gipsey's old budget, for mending a chair.
- The miller's horse tied to the old smithy door
- Stood stamping his feet, by the flies bitten sore,
- Awaiting the smith as he wanted a shoe;
- And he stampt till another fell off and made two:
- Till the miller, expecting that all would get loose,
- Went to seek him and cursed him outright for a goose;
- But he dipt his dry beak in the mug once or twice
- And forgot all his passion and toil in a trice.
- And the flybitten horse at the old smithy post
- Might stamp till his shoes and his legs they were lost.
- He sung his old songs and forgot his old mill--
- Blow winds high or low, she might rest her at will.
- And the cobbler, in spite of his bustle for pelf,
- Left the shop all the day to take care of itself.
- And the toper who carried his house on his head,
- No wife to be teazing, no bairns to be fed,
- Would sit out the week or the month or the year
- Or a life-time so long as he'd credit for beer.
- The ploughman he talked of his skill as divine,
- How he could plough thurrows as straight as a line;
- And the blacksmith he swore, had he but the command,
- He could shoe the king's hunter the best in the land;
- And the cobbler declared, was his skill but once seen,
- He should soon get an order for shoes from the queen.
- But the tinker he swore he could beat them all three,
- For gi' me a pair of old bellows, says he,
- And I'll make them roar out like the wind in a storm
- And make them blow fire out of coal hardly warm.
- The toper said nothing but wished the quart full
- And swore he could toss it all off at a pull.
- Have one, said the tinker; but wit was away,
- When the bet was to bind him he'd nothing to pay.
- And thus in the face of life's sun-and-shower weather
- They drank, bragged, and sung, and got merry together.
- The sun he went down--the last gleam from his brow
- Flung a smile of repose on the holiday plough;
- The glooms they approached, and the dews like a rain
- Fell thick and hung pearls on the old sorrel mane
- Of the horse that the miller had brought to be shod,
- And the morning awoke, saw a sight rather odd--
- For a bit of the halter still hung at the door,
- Bit through by the horse now at feed on the moor;
- And the old tinker's budget lay still in the weather,
- While all kept on singing and drinking together.
- _The Flitting_
- I've left my own old home of homes,
- Green fields and every pleasant place;
- The summer like a stranger comes,
- I pause and hardly know her face.
- I miss the hazel's happy green,
- The blue bell's quiet hanging blooms,
- Where envy's sneer was never seen,
- Where staring malice never comes.
- I miss the heath, its yellow furze,
- Molehills and rabbit tracks that lead
- Through beesom, ling, and teazel burrs
- That spread a wilderness indeed;
- The woodland oaks and all below
- That their white powdered branches shield,
- The mossy paths: the very crow
- Croaks music in my native field.
- I sit me in my corner chair
- That seems to feel itself from home,
- And hear bird music here and there
- From hawthorn hedge and orchard come;
- I hear, but all is strange and new:
- I sat on my old bench in June,
- The sailing puddock's shrill "peelew"
- On Royce Wood seemed a sweeter tune.
- I walk adown the narrow lane,
- The nightingale is singing now,
- But like to me she seems at loss
- For Royce Wood and its shielding bough.
- I lean upon the window sill,
- The trees and summer happy seem;
- Green, sunny green they shine, but still
- My heart goes far away to dream.
- Of happiness, and thoughts arise
- With home-bred pictures many a one,
- Green lanes that shut out burning skies
- And old crooked stiles to rest upon;
- Above them hangs the maple tree,
- Below grass swells a velvet hill,
- And little footpaths sweet to see
- Go seeking sweeter places still,
- With bye and bye a brook to cross
- Oer which a little arch is thrown:
- No brook is here, I feel the loss
- From home and friends and all alone.
- --The stone pit with its shelvy sides
- Seemed hanging rocks in my esteem;
- I miss the prospect far and wide
- From Langley Bush, and so I seem
- Alone and in a stranger scene,
- Far, far from spots my heart esteems,
- The closen with their ancient green,
- Heaths, woods, and pastures, sunny streams.
- The hawthorns here were hung with may,
- But still they seem in deader green,
- The sun een seems to lose its way
- Nor knows the quarter it is in.
- I dwell in trifles like a child,
- I feel as ill becomes a man,
- And still my thoughts like weedlings wild
- Grow up to blossom where they can.
- They turn to places known so long
- I feel that joy was dwelling there,
- So home-fed pleasure fills the song
- That has no present joys to hear.
- I read in books for happiness,
- But books are like the sea to joy,
- They change--as well give age the glass
- To hunt its visage when a boy.
- For books they follow fashions new
- And throw all old esteems away,
- In crowded streets flowers never grew,
- But many there hath died away.
- Some sing the pomps of chivalry
- As legends of the ancient time,
- Where gold and pearls and mystery
- Are shadows painted for sublime;
- But passions of sublimity
- Belong to plain and simpler things,
- And David underneath a tree
- Sought when a shepherd Salem's springs,
- Where moss did into cushions spring,
- Forming a seat of velvet hue,
- A small unnoticed trifling thing
- To all but heaven's hailing dew.
- And David's crown hath passed away,
- Yet poesy breathes his shepherd-skill,
- His palace lost--and to this day
- The little moss is blossoming still.
- Strange scenes mere shadows are to me,
- Vague impersonifying things;
- I love with my old haunts to be
- By quiet woods and gravel springs,
- Where little pebbles wear as smooth
- As hermits' beads by gentle floods,
- Whose noises do my spirits soothe
- And warm them into singing moods.
- Here every tree is strange to me,
- All foreign things where eer I go,
- There's none where boyhood made a swee
- Or clambered up to rob a crow.
- No hollow tree or woodland bower
- Well known when joy was beating high,
- Where beauty ran to shun a shower
- And love took pains to keep her dry,
- And laid the sheaf upon the ground
- To keep her from the dripping grass,
- And ran for stocks and set them round
- Till scarce a drop of rain could pass
- Through; where the maidens they reclined
- And sung sweet ballads now forgot,
- Which brought sweet memories to the mind,
- But here no memory knows them not.
- There have I sat by many a tree
- And leaned oer many a rural stile,
- And conned my thoughts as joys to me,
- Nought heeding who might frown or smile.
- Twas nature's beauty that inspired
- My heart with rapture not its own,
- And she's a fame that never tires;
- How could I feel myself alone?
- No, pasture molehills used to lie
- And talk to me of sunny days,
- And then the glad sheep resting bye
- All still in ruminating praise
- Of summer and the pleasant place
- And every weed and blossom too
- Was looking upward in my face
- With friendship's welcome "how do ye do?"
- All tenants of an ancient place
- And heirs of noble heritage,
- Coeval they with Adam's race
- And blest with more substantial age.
- For when the world first saw the sun
- These little flowers beheld him too,
- And when his love for earth begun
- They were the first his smiles to woo.
- There little lambtoe bunches springs
- In red tinged and begolden dye
- For ever, and like China kings
- They come but never seem to die.
- There may-bloom with its little threads
- Still comes upon the thorny bowers
- And neer forgets those prickly heads
- Like fairy pins amid the flowers.
- And still they bloom as on the day
- They first crowned wilderness and rock,
- When Abel haply wreathed with may
- The firstlings of his little flock,
- And Eve might from the matted thorn
- To deck her lone and lovely brow
- Reach that same rose that heedless scorn
- Misnames as the dog rosey now.
- Give me no high-flown fangled things,
- No haughty pomp in marching chime,
- Where muses play on golden strings
- And splendour passes for sublime,
- Where cities stretch as far as fame
- And fancy's straining eye can go,
- And piled until the sky for shame
- Is stooping far away below.
- I love the verse that mild and bland
- Breathes of green fields and open sky,
- I love the muse that in her hand
- Bears flowers of native poesy;
- Who walks nor skips the pasture brook
- In scorn, but by the drinking horse
- Leans oer its little brig to look
- How far the sallows lean across,
- And feels a rapture in her breast
- Upon their root-fringed grains to mark
- A hermit morehen's sedgy nest
- Just like a naiad's summer bark.
- She counts the eggs she cannot reach
- Admires the spot and loves it well,
- And yearns, so nature's lessons teach,
- Amid such neighbourhoods to dwell.
- I love the muse who sits her down
- Upon the molehill's little lap,
- Who feels no fear to stain her gown
- And pauses by the hedgerow gap;
- Not with that affectation, praise
- Of song, to sing and never see
- A field flower grown in all her days
- Or een a forest's aged tree.
- Een here my simple feelings nurse
- A love for every simple weed,
- And een this little shepherd's purse
- Grieves me to cut it up; indeed
- I feel at times a love and joy
- For every weed and every thing,
- A feeling kindred from a boy,
- A feeling brought with every Spring.
- And why? this shepherd's purse that grows
- In this strange spot, in days gone bye
- Grew in the little garden rows
- Of my old home now left; and I
- Feel what I never felt before,
- This weed an ancient neighbour here,
- And though I own the spot no more
- Its every trifle makes it dear.
- The ivy at the parlour end,
- The woodbine at the garden gate,
- Are all and each affection's friend
- That render parting desolate.
- But times will change and friends must part
- And nature still can make amends;
- Their memory lingers round the heart
- Like life whose essence is its friends.
- Time looks on pomp with vengeful mood
- Or killing apathy's disdain;
- So where old marble cities stood
- Poor persecuted weeds remain.
- She feels a love for little things
- That very few can feel beside,
- And still the grass eternal springs
- Where castles stood and grandeur died.
- _Remembrances_
- Summer's pleasures they are gone like to visions every one,
- And the cloudy days of autumn and of winter cometh on.
- I tried to call them back, but unbidden they are gone
- Far away from heart and eye and forever far away.
- Dear heart, and can it be that such raptures meet decay?
- I thought them all eternal when by Langley Bush I lay,
- I thought them joys eternal when I used to shout and play
- On its bank at "clink and bandy," "chock" and "taw" and "ducking stone,"
- Where silence sitteth now on the wild heath as her own
- Like a ruin of the past all alone.
- When I used to lie and sing by old Eastwell's boiling spring,
- When I used to tie the willow boughs together for a swing,
- And fish with crooked pins and thread and never catch a thing,
- With heart just like a feather, now as heavy as a stone;
- When beneath old Lea Close oak I the bottom branches broke
- To make our harvest cart like so many working folk,
- And then to cut a straw at the brook to have a soak.
- O I never dreamed of parting or that trouble had a sting,
- Or that pleasures like a flock of birds would ever take to wing,
- Leaving nothing but a little naked spring.
- When jumping time away on old Crossberry Way,
- And eating awes like sugarplums ere they had lost the may,
- And skipping like a leveret before the peep of day
- On the roly poly up and downs of pleasant Swordy Well,
- When in Round Oak's narrow lane as the south got black again
- We sought the hollow ash that was shelter from the rain,
- With our pockets full of peas we had stolen from the grain;
- How delicious was the dinner time on such a showery day!
- O words are poor receipts for what time hath stole away,
- The ancient pulpit trees and the play.
- When for school oer Little Field with its brook and wooden brig,
- Where I swaggered like a man though I was not half so big,
- While I held my little plough though twas but a willow twig,
- And drove my team along made of nothing but a name,
- "Gee hep" and "hoit" and "woi"--O I never call to mind
- These pleasant names of places but I leave a sigh behind,
- While I see little mouldiwarps hang sweeing to the wind
- On the only aged willow that in all the field remains,
- And nature hides her face while they're sweeing in their chains
- And in a silent murmuring complains.
- Here was commons for their hills, where they seek for freedom still,
- Though every common's gone and though traps are set to kill
- The little homeless miners--O it turns my bosom chill
- When I think of old Sneap Green, Puddock's Nook and Hilly Snow,
- Where bramble bushes grew and the daisy gemmed in dew
- And the hills of silken grass like to cushions to the view,
- Where we threw the pismire crumbs when we'd nothing else to do,
- All levelled like a desert by the never weary plough,
- All banished like the sun where that cloud is passing now
- And settled here for ever on its brow.
- O I never thought that joys would run away from boys,
- Or that boys would change their minds and forsake such summer joys;
- But alack I never dreamed that the world had other toys
- To petrify first feelings like the fable into stone,
- Till I found the pleasure past and a winter come at last,
- Then the fields were sudden bare and the sky got overcast
- And boyhood's pleasing haunt like a blossom in the blast
- Was shrivelled to a withered weed and trampled down and done,
- Till vanished was the morning spring and set the summer sun
- And winter fought her battle strife and won.
- By Langley Bush I roam, but the bush hath left its hill,
- On Cowper Green I stray, tis a desert strange and chill,
- And the spreading Lea Close oak, ere decay had penned its will,
- To the axe of the spoiler and self-interest fell a prey,
- And Crossberry Way and old Round Oak's narrow lane
- With its hollow trees like pulpits I shall never see again,
- Enclosure like a Buonaparte let not a thing remain,
- It levelled every bush and tree and levelled every hill
- And hung the moles for traitors--though the brook is running still
- It runs a sicker brook, cold and chill.
- O had I known as then joy had left the paths of men,
- I had watched her night and day, be sure, and never slept agen,
- And when she turned to go, O I'd caught her mantle then,
- And wooed her like a lover by my lonely side to stay;
- Ay, knelt and worshipped on, as love in beauty's bower,
- And clung upon her smiles as a bee upon a flower,
- And gave her heart my posies, all cropt in a sunny hour,
- As keepsakes and pledges all to never fade away;
- But love never heeded to treasure up the may,
- So it went the common road to decay.
- _The Cottager_
- True as the church clock hand the hour pursues
- He plods about his toils and reads the news,
- And at the blacksmith's shop his hour will stand
- To talk of "Lunun" as a foreign land.
- For from his cottage door in peace or strife
- He neer went fifty miles in all his life.
- His knowledge with old notions still combined
- Is twenty years behind the march of mind.
- He views new knowledge with suspicious eyes
- And thinks it blasphemy to be so wise.
- On steam's almighty tales he wondering looks
- As witchcraft gleaned from old blackletter books.
- Life gave him comfort but denied him wealth,
- He toils in quiet and enjoys his health,
- He smokes a pipe at night and drinks his beer
- And runs no scores on tavern screens to clear.
- He goes to market all the year about
- And keeps one hour and never stays it out.
- Een at St. Thomas tide old Rover's bark
- Hails Dapple's trot an hour before it's dark.
- He is a simple-worded plain old man
- Whose good intents take errors in their plan.
- Oft sentimental and with saddened vein
- He looks on trifles and bemoans their pain,
- And thinks the angler mad, and loudly storms
- With emphasis of speech oer murdered worms.
- And hunters cruel--pleading with sad care
- Pity's petition for the fox and hare,
- Yet feels self-satisfaction in his woes
- For war's crushed myriads of his slaughtered foes.
- He is right scrupulous in one pretext
- And wholesale errors swallows in the next.
- He deems it sin to sing, yet not to say
- A song--a mighty difference in his way.
- And many a moving tale in antique rhymes
- He has for Christmas and such merry times,
- When "Chevy Chase," his masterpiece of song,
- Is said so earnest none can think it long.
- Twas the old vicar's way who should be right,
- For the late vicar was his heart's delight,
- And while at church he often shakes his head
- To think what sermons the old vicar made,
- Downright and orthodox that all the land
- Who had their ears to hear might understand,
- But now such mighty learning meets his ears
- He thinks it Greek or Latin which he hears,
- Yet church receives him every sabbath day
- And rain or snow he never keeps away.
- All words of reverence still his heart reveres,
- Low bows his head when Jesus meets his ears,
- And still he thinks it blasphemy as well
- Such names without a capital to spell.
- In an old corner cupboard by the wall
- His books are laid, though good, in number small,
- His Bible first in place; from worth and age
- Whose grandsire's name adorns the title page,
- And blank leaves once, now filled with kindred claims,
- Display a world's epitome of names.
- Parents and children and grandchildren all
- Memory's affections in the lists recall.
- And prayer-book next, much worn though strongly bound,
- Proves him a churchman orthodox and sound.
- The "Pilgrim's Progress" and the "Death of Abel"
- Are seldom missing from his Sunday table,
- And prime old Tusser in his homely trim,
- The first of bards in all the world with him,
- And only poet which his leisure knows;
- Verse deals in fancy, so he sticks to prose.
- These are the books he reads and reads again
- And weekly hunts the almanacks for rain.
- Here and no further learning's channels ran;
- Still, neighbours prize him as the learned man.
- His cottage is a humble place of rest
- With one spare room to welcome every guest,
- And that tall poplar pointing to the sky
- His own hand planted when an idle boy,
- It shades his chimney while the singing wind
- Hums songs of shelter to his happy mind.
- Within his cot the largest ears of corn
- He ever found his picture frames adorn:
- Brave Granby's head, De Grosse's grand defeat;
- He rubs his hands and shows how Rodney beat.
- And from the rafters upon strings depend
- Beanstalks beset with pods from end to end,
- Whose numbers without counting may be seen
- Wrote on the almanack behind the screen.
- Around the corner up on worsted strung
- Pooties in wreaths above the cupboard hung.
- Memory at trifling incidents awakes
- And there he keeps them for his children's sakes,
- Who when as boys searched every sedgy lane,
- Traced every wood and shattered clothes again,
- Roaming about on rapture's easy wing
- To hunt those very pooty shells in spring.
- And thus he lives too happy to be poor
- While strife neer pauses at so mean a door.
- Low in the sheltered valley stands his cot,
- He hears the mountain storm and feels it not;
- Winter and spring, toil ceasing ere tis dark,
- Rests with the lamb and rises with the lark,
- Content his helpmate to the day's employ
- And care neer comes to steal a single joy.
- Time, scarcely noticed, turns his hair to grey,
- Yet leaves him happy as a child at play.
- _Insects_
- These tiny loiterers on the barley's beard,
- And happy units of a numerous herd
- Of playfellows, the laughing Summer brings,
- Mocking the sunshine in their glittering wings,
- How merrily they creep, and run, and fly!
- No kin they bear to labour's drudgery,
- Smoothing the velvet of the pale hedge-rose;
- And where they fly for dinner no one knows--
- The dew-drops feed them not--they love the shine
- Of noon, whose sun may bring them golden wine.
- All day they're playing in their Sunday dress--
- Till night goes sleep, and they can do no less;
- Then, to the heath bell's silken hood they fly,
- And like to princes in their slumbers lie,
- Secure from night, and dropping dews, and all,
- In silken beds and roomy painted hall.
- So merrily they spend their summer day,
- Now in the cornfields, now the new-mown hay.
- One almost fancies that such happy things,
- With coloured hoods and richly burnished wings,
- Are fairy folk, in splendid masquerade
- Disguised, as if of mortal folk afraid,
- Keeping their merry pranks a mystery still,
- Lest glaring day should do their secrets ill.
- _Sudden Shower_
- Black grows the southern sky, betokening rain,
- And humming hive-bees homeward hurry bye:
- They feel the change; so let us shun the grain,
- And take the broad road while our feet are dry.
- Ay, there some dropples moistened on my face,
- And pattered on my hat--tis coming nigh!
- Let's look about, and find a sheltering place.
- The little things around, like you and I,
- Are hurrying through the grass to shun the shower.
- Here stoops an ash-tree--hark! the wind gets high,
- But never mind; this ivy, for an hour,
- Rain as it may, will keep us dryly here:
- That little wren knows well his sheltering bower,
- Nor leaves his dry house though we come so near.
- _Evening Primrose_
- When once the sun sinks in the west,
- And dew-drops pearl the evening's breast;
- Almost as pale as moonbeams are,
- Or its companionable star,
- The evening primrose opes anew
- Its delicate blossoms to the dew;
- And, shunning-hermit of the light,
- Wastes its fair bloom upon the night;
- Who, blindfold to its fond caresses,
- Knows not the beauty he possesses.
- Thus it blooms on till night is bye
- And day looks out with open eye,
- Abashed at the gaze it cannot shun,
- It faints and withers, and is done.
- _The Shepherd's Tree_
- Huge elm, with rifted trunk all notched and scarred,
- Like to a warrior's destiny! I love
- To stretch me often on thy shadowed sward,
- And hear the laugh of summer leaves above;
- Or on thy buttressed roots to sit, and lean
- In careless attitude, and there reflect
- On times, and deeds, and darings that have been--
- Old castaways, now swallowed in neglect;
- While thou art towering in thy strength of heart,
- Stirring the soul to vain imaginings,
- In which life's sordid being hath no part.
- The wind of that eternal ditty sings,
- Humming of future things, that burn the mind
- To leave some fragment of itself behind.
- _Wild Bees_
- These children of the sun which summer brings
- As pastoral minstrels in her merry train
- Pipe rustic ballads upon busy wings
- And glad the cotters' quiet toils again.
- The white-nosed bee that bores its little hole
- In mortared walls and pipes its symphonies,
- And never absent couzen, black as coal,
- That Indian-like bepaints its little thighs,
- With white and red bedight for holiday,
- Right earlily a-morn do pipe and play
- And with their legs stroke slumber from their eyes.
- And aye so fond they of their singing seem
- That in their holes abed at close of day
- They still keep piping in their honey dreams,
- And larger ones that thrum on ruder pipe
- Round the sweet smelling closen and rich woods
- Where tawny white and red flush clover buds
- Shine bonnily and bean fields blossom ripe,
- Shed dainty perfumes and give honey food
- To these sweet poets of the summer fields;
- Me much delighting as I stroll along
- The narrow path that hay laid meadow yields,
- Catching the windings of their wandering song.
- The black and yellow bumble first on wing
- To buzz among the sallow's early flowers,
- Hiding its nest in holes from fickle spring
- Who stints his rambles with her frequent showers;
- And one that may for wiser piper pass,
- In livery dress half sables and half red,
- Who laps a moss ball in the meadow grass
- And hoards her stores when April showers have fled;
- And russet commoner who knows the face
- Of every blossom that the meadow brings,
- Starting the traveller to a quicker pace
- By threatening round his head in many rings:
- These sweeten summer in their happy glee
- By giving for her honey melody.
- _The Firetail's Nest_
- "Tweet" pipes the robin as the cat creeps by
- Her nestling young that in the elderns lie,
- And then the bluecap tootles in its glee,
- Picking the flies from orchard apple tree,
- And "pink" the chaffinch cries its well-known strain,
- Urging its kind to utter "pink" again,
- While in a quiet mood hedgesparrows try
- An inward stir of shadowed melody.
- Around the rotten tree the firetail mourns
- As the old hedger to his toil returns,
- Chopping the grain to stop the gap close by
- The hole where her blue eggs in safety lie.
- Of everything that stirs she dreameth wrong
- And pipes her "tweet tut" fears the whole day long.
- _The Fear of Flowers_
- The nodding oxeye bends before the wind,
- The woodbine quakes lest boys their flowers should find,
- And prickly dogrose spite of its array
- Can't dare the blossom-seeking hand away,
- While thistles wear their heavy knobs of bloom
- Proud as a warhorse wears its haughty plume,
- And by the roadside danger's self defy;
- On commons where pined sheep and oxen lie
- In ruddy pomp and ever thronging mood
- It stands and spreads like danger in a wood,
- And in the village street where meanest weeds
- Can't stand untouched to fill their husks with seeds,
- The haughty thistle oer all danger towers,
- In every place the very wasp of flowers.
- _Summer Evening_
- The frog half fearful jumps across the path,
- And little mouse that leaves its hole at eve
- Nimbles with timid dread beneath the swath;
- My rustling steps awhile their joys deceive,
- Till past,--and then the cricket sings more strong,
- And grasshoppers in merry moods still wear
- The short night weary with their fretting song.
- Up from behind the molehill jumps the hare,
- Cheat of his chosen bed, and from the bank
- The yellowhammer flutters in short fears
- From off its nest hid in the grasses rank,
- And drops again when no more noise it hears.
- Thus nature's human link and endless thrall,
- Proud man, still seems the enemy of all.
- _Emmonsail's Heath in Winter_
- I love to see the old heath's withered brake
- Mingle its crimpled leaves with furze and ling,
- While the old heron from the lonely lake
- Starts slow and flaps his melancholy wing,
- And oddling crow in idle motions swing
- On the half rotten ashtree's topmost twig,
- Beside whose trunk the gipsy makes his bed.
- Up flies the bouncing woodcock from the brig
- Where a black quagmire quakes beneath the tread,
- The fieldfares chatter in the whistling thorn
- And for the awe round fields and closen rove,
- And coy bumbarrels twenty in a drove
- Flit down the hedgerows in the frozen plain
- And hang on little twigs and start again.
- _Pleasures of Fancy_
- A path, old tree, goes by thee crooking on,
- And through this little gate that claps and bangs
- Against thy rifted trunk, what steps hath gone?
- Though but a lonely way, yet mystery hangs
- Oer crowds of pastoral scenes recordless here.
- The boy might climb the nest in thy young boughs
- That's slept half an eternity; in fear
- The herdsman may have left his startled cows
- For shelter when heaven's thunder voice was near;
- Here too the woodman on his wallet laid
- For pillow may have slept an hour away;
- And poet pastoral, lover of the shade,
- Here sat and mused half some long summer day
- While some old shepherd listened to the lay.
- _To Napoleon_
- The heroes of the present and the past
- Were puny, vague, and nothingness to thee:
- Thou didst a span grasp mighty to the last,
- And strain for glory when thy die was cast.
- That little island, on the Atlantic sea,
- Was but a dust-spot in a lake: thy mind
- Swept space as shoreless as eternity.
- Thy giant powers outstript this gaudy age
- Of heroes; and, as looking at the sun,
- So gazing on thy greatness, made men blind
- To merits, that had adoration won
- In olden times. The world was on thy page
- Of victories but a comma. Fame could find
- No parallel, thy greatness to presage.
- _The Skylark_
- Above the russet clods the corn is seen
- Sprouting its spiry points of tender green,
- Where squats the hare, to terrors wide awake,
- Like some brown clod the harrows failed to break.
- Opening their golden caskets to the sun,
- The buttercups make schoolboys eager run,
- To see who shall be first to pluck the prize--
- Up from their hurry see the Skylark flies,
- And oer her half-formed nest, with happy wings,
- Winnows the air till in the cloud she sings,
- Then hangs a dust spot in the sunny skies,
- And drops and drops till in her nest she lies,
- Which they unheeded passed--not dreaming then
- That birds, which flew so high, would drop again
- To nests upon the ground, which anything
- May come at to destroy. Had they the wing
- Like such a bird, themselves would be too proud
- And build on nothing but a passing cloud!
- As free from danger as the heavens are free
- From pain and toil, there would they build and be,
- And sail about the world to scenes unheard
- Of and unseen,--O were they but a bird!
- So think they, while they listen to its song,
- And smile and fancy and so pass along;
- While its low nest, moist with the dews of morn,
- Lies safely, with the leveret, in the corn.
- _The Flood_
- Waves trough, rebound, and furious boil again,
- Like plunging monsters rising underneath,
- Who at the top curl up a shaggy mane,
- A moment catching at a surer breath,
- Then plunging headlong down and down, and on
- Each following whirls the shadow of the last;
- And other monsters rise when those are gone,
- Crest their fringed waves, plunge onward and are past.
- The chill air comes around me oceanly,
- From bank to bank the waterstrife is spread;
- Strange birds like snowspots oer the whizzing sea
- Hang where the wild duck hurried past and fled.
- On roars the flood, all restless to be free,
- Like Trouble wandering to Eternity.
- _The Thrush's Nest_
- Within a thick and spreading hawthorn bush,
- That overhung a molehill large and round,
- I heard from morn to morn a merry thrush
- Sing hymns to sunrise, and I drank the sound
- With joy; and, often an intruding guest,
- I watched her secret toils from day to day--
- How true she warped the moss, to form a nest,
- And modelled it within with wood and clay;
- And by and by, like heath-bells gilt with dew,
- There lay her shining eggs, as bright as flowers,
- Ink-spotted-over shells of greeny blue;
- And there I witnessed in the sunny hours
- A brood of nature's minstrels chirp and fly,
- Glad as that sunshine and the laughing sky.
- _November_
- Sybil of months, and worshipper of winds,
- I love thee, rude and boisterous as thou art;
- And scraps of joy my wandering ever finds
- Mid thy uproarious madness--when the start
- Of sudden tempests stirs the forest leaves
- Into hoarse fury, till the shower set free
- Stills the huge swells. Then ebb the mighty heaves,
- That sway the forest like a troubled sea.
- I love thy wizard noise, and rave in turn
- Half-vacant thoughts and rhymes of careless form;
- Then hide me from the shower, a short sojourn,
- Neath ivied oak; and mutter to the storm,
- Wishing its melody belonged to me,
- That I might breathe a living song to thee.
- _Earth's Eternity_
- Man, Earth's poor shadow! talks of Earth's decay:
- But hath it nothing of eternal kin?
- No majesty that shall not pass away?
- No soul of greatness springing up within?
- Thought marks without hoar shadows of sublime,
- Pictures of power, which if not doomed to win
- Eternity, stand laughing at old Time
- For ages: in the grand ancestral line
- Of things eternal, mounting to divine,
- I read Magnificence where ages pay
- Worship like conquered foes to the Apennine,
- Because they could not conquer. There sits Day
- Too high for Night to come at--mountains shine,
- Outpeering Time, too lofty for decay.
- _Autumn_
- Autumn comes laden with her ripened load
- Of fruitage and so scatters them abroad
- That each fern-smothered heath and mole-hill waste
- Are black with bramble berries--where in haste
- The chubby urchins from the village hie
- To feast them there, stained with the purple dye;
- While painted woods around my rambles be
- In draperies worthy of eternity.
- Yet will the leaves soon patter on the ground,
- And death's deaf voice awake at every sound:
- One drops--then others--and the last that fell
- Rings for those left behind their passing bell.
- Thus memory every where her tidings brings
- How sad death robs us of life's dearest things.
- _Signs of Winter_
- The cat runs races with her tail. The dog
- Leaps oer the orchard hedge and knarls the grass.
- The swine run round and grunt and play with straw,
- Snatching out hasty mouthfuls from the stack.
- Sudden upon the elmtree tops the crow
- Unceremonious visit pays and croaks,
- Then swops away. From mossy barn the owl
- Bobs hasty out--wheels round and, scared as soon,
- As hastily retires. The ducks grow wild
- And from the muddy pond fly up and wheel
- A circle round the village and soon, tired,
- Plunge in the pond again. The maids in haste
- Snatch from the orchard hedge the mizzled clothes
- And laughing hurry in to keep them dry.
- _Nightwind_
- Darkness like midnight from the sobbing woods
- Clamours with dismal tidings of the rain,
- Roaring as rivers breaking loose in floods
- To spread and foam and deluge all the plain.
- The cotter listens at his door again,
- Half doubting whether it be floods or wind,
- And through the thickening darkness looks afraid,
- Thinking of roads that travel has to find
- Through night's black depths in danger's garb arrayed.
- And the loud glabber round the flaze soon stops
- When hushed to silence by the lifted hand
- Of fearing dame who hears the noise in dread
- And thinks a deluge comes to drown the land;
- Nor dares she go to bed until the tempest drops.
- NOTE.--The remaining poems in this section are taken from a series,
- numbering several hundred brief pieces, written by Clare in the winter
- of 1835-6. Perhaps it is unjust to Clare to consider them out of their
- environment; it would be more unjust not to represent this phase of
- his poetry.
- _Birds in Alarm_
- The firetail tells the boys when nests are nigh
- And tweets and flies from every passer-bye.
- The yellowhammer never makes a noise
- But flies in silence from the noisy boys;
- The boys will come and take them every day,
- And still she lays as none were ta'en away.
- The nightingale keeps tweeting-churring round
- But leaves in silence when the nest is found.
- The pewit hollos "chewrit" as she flies
- And flops about the shepherd where he lies;
- But when her nest is found she stops her song
- And cocks [her] coppled crown and runs along.
- Wrens cock their tails and chitter loud and play,
- And robins hollo "tut" and fly away.
- _Dyke Side_
- The frog croaks loud, and maidens dare not pass
- But fear the noisome toad and shun the grass;
- And on the sunny banks they dare not go
- Where hissing snakes run to the flood below.
- The nuthatch noises loud in wood and wild,
- Like women turning skreeking to a child.
- The schoolboy hears and brushes through the trees
- And runs about till drabbled to the knees.
- The old hawk winnows round the old crow's nest;
- The schoolboy hears and wonder fills his breast.
- He throws his basket down to climb the tree
- And wonders what the red blotched eggs can be:
- The green woodpecker bounces from the view
- And hollos as he buzzes bye "kew kew."
- _Badger_
- When midnight comes a host of dogs and men
- Go out and track the badger to his den,
- And put a sack within the hole, and lie
- Till the old grunting badger passes bye.
- He comes and hears--they let the strongest loose.
- The old fox hears the noise and drops the goose.
- The poacher shoots and hurries from the cry,
- And the old hare half wounded buzzes bye.
- They get a forked stick to bear him down
- And clap the dogs and take him to the town,
- And bait him all the day with many dogs,
- And laugh and shout and fright the scampering hogs.
- He runs along and bites at all he meets:
- They shout and hollo down the noisy streets.
- He turns about to face the loud uproar
- And drives the rebels to their very door.
- The frequent stone is hurled where eer they go;
- When badgers fight, then every one's a foe.
- The dogs are clapt and urged to join the fray;
- The badger turns and drives them all away.
- Though scarcely half as big, demure and small,
- He fights with dogs for bones and beats them all.
- The heavy mastiff, savage in the fray,
- Lies down and licks his feet and turns away.
- The bulldog knows his match and waxes cold,
- The badger grins and never leaves his hold.
- He drives the crowd and follows at their heels
- And bites them through--the drunkard swears and reels.
- The frighted women take the boys away,
- The blackguard laughs and hurries on the fray.
- He tries to reach the woods, an awkward race,
- But sticks and cudgels quickly stop the chace.
- He turns agen and drives the noisy crowd
- And beats the many dogs in noises loud.
- He drives away and beats them every one,
- And then they loose them all and set them on.
- He falls as dead and kicked by boys and men,
- Then starts and grins and drives the crowd agen;
- Till kicked and torn and beaten out he lies
- And leaves his hold and cackles, groans, and dies.
- _The Fox_
- The shepherd on his journey heard when nigh
- His dog among the bushes barking high;
- The ploughman ran and gave a hearty shout,
- He found a weary fox and beat him out.
- The ploughman laughed and would have ploughed him in
- But the old shepherd took him for the skin.
- He lay upon the furrow stretched for dead,
- The old dog lay and licked the wounds that bled,
- The ploughman beat him till his ribs would crack,
- And then the shepherd slung him at his back;
- And when he rested, to his dog's surprise,
- The old fox started from his dead disguise;
- And while the dog lay panting in the sedge
- He up and snapt and bolted through the hedge.
- He scampered to the bushes far away;
- The shepherd called the ploughman to the fray;
- The ploughman wished he had a gun to shoot.
- The old dog barked and followed the pursuit.
- The shepherd threw his hook and tottered past;
- The ploughman ran but none could go so fast;
- The woodman threw his faggot from the way
- And ceased to chop and wondered at the fray.
- But when he saw the dog and heard the cry
- He threw his hatchet--but the fox was bye.
- The shepherd broke his hook and lost the skin;
- He found a badger hole and bolted in.
- They tried to dig, but, safe from danger's way,
- He lived to chase the hounds another day.
- _The Vixen_
- Among the taller wood with ivy hung,
- The old fox plays and dances round her young.
- She snuffs and barks if any passes bye
- And swings her tail and turns prepared to fly.
- The horseman hurries bye, she bolts to see,
- And turns agen, from danger never free.
- If any stands she runs among the poles
- And barks and snaps and drives them in the holes.
- The shepherd sees them and the boy goes bye
- And gets a stick and progs the hole to try.
- They get all still and lie in safety sure
- And out again when every thing's secure
- And start and snap at blackbirds bouncing bye
- To fight and catch the great white butterfly.
- _Turkeys_
- The turkeys wade the close to catch the bees
- In the old border full of maple trees
- And often lay away and breed and come
- And bring a brood of chelping chickens home.
- The turkey gobbles loud and drops his rag
- And struts and sprunts his tail and then lets drag
- His wing on ground and makes a huzzing noise,
- Nauntles at passer-bye and drives the boys
- And bounces up and flies at passer-bye.
- The old dog snaps and grins nor ventures nigh.
- He gobbles loud and drives the boys from play;
- They throw their sticks and kick and run away.
- _The Poet's Death_
- The world is taking little heed
- And plods from day to day:
- The vulgar flourish like a weed,
- The learned pass away.
- We miss him on the summer path
- The lonely summer day,
- Where mowers cut the pleasant swath
- And maidens make the hay.
- The vulgar take but little heed;
- The garden wants his care;
- There lies the book he used to read,
- There stands the empty chair.
- The boat laid up, the voyage oer,
- And passed the stormy wave,
- The world is going as before,
- The poet in his grave.
- _The Beautiful Stranger_
- I cannot know what country owns thee now,
- With France's forest lilies on thy brow.
- When England knew thee thou wert passing fair;
- I never knew a foreign face so rare.
- The world of waters rolls and rushes bye,
- Nor lets me wander where thy vallies lie.
- But surely France must be a pleasant place
- That greets the stranger with so fair a face;
- The English maiden blushes down the dance,
- But few can equal the fair maid of France.
- I saw thee lovely and I wished thee mine,
- And the last song I ever wrote is thine.
- Thy country's honour on thy face attends;
- Men may be foes but beauty makes us friends.
- _The Tramp_
- He eats (a moment's stoppage to his song)
- The stolen turnip as he goes along;
- And hops along and heeds with careless eye
- The passing crowded stage coach reeling bye.
- He talks to none but wends his silent way,
- And finds a hovel at the close of day,
- Or under any hedge his house is made.
- He has no calling and he owns no trade.
- An old smoaked blanket arches oer his head,
- A whisp of straw or stubble makes his bed.
- He knows a lawless law that claims no kin
- But meet and plunder on and feel no sin--
- No matter where they go or where they dwell
- They dally with the winds and laugh at hell.
- _Farmer's Boy_
- He waits all day beside his little flock
- And asks the passing stranger what's o'clock,
- But those who often pass his daily tasks
- Look at their watch and tell before he asks.
- He mutters stories to himself and lies
- Where the thick hedge the warmest house supplies,
- And when he hears the hunters far and wide
- He climbs the highest tree to see them ride--
- He climbs till all the fields are blea and bare
- And makes the old crow's nest an easy chair.
- And soon his sheep are got in other grounds--
- He hastens down and fears his master come,
- He stops the gap and keeps them all in bounds
- And tends them closely till it's time for home.
- _Braggart_
- With careful step to keep his balance up
- He reels on warily along the street,
- Slabbering at mouth and with a staggering stoop
- Mutters an angry look at all he meets.
- Bumptious and vain and proud he shoulders up
- And would be something if he knew but how;
- To any man on earth he will not stoop
- But cracks of work, of horses and of plough.
- Proud of the foolish talk, the ale he quaffs,
- He never heeds the insult loud that laughs:
- With rosy maid he tries to joke and play,--
- Who shrugs and nettles deep his pomp and pride.
- And calls him "drunken beast" and runs away--
- King to himself and fool to all beside.
- _Sunday Dip_
- The morning road is thronged with merry boys
- Who seek the water for their Sunday joys;
- They run to seek the shallow pit, and wade
- And dance about the water in the shade.
- The boldest ventures first and dashes in,
- And others go and follow to the chin,
- And duck about, and try to lose their fears,
- And laugh to hear the thunder in their ears.
- They bundle up the rushes for a boat
- And try across the deepest place to float:
- Beneath the willow trees they ride and stoop--
- The awkward load will scarcely bear them up.
- Without their aid the others float away,
- And play about the water half the day.
- _Merry Maid_
- Bonny and stout and brown, without a hat,
- She frowns offended when they call her fat--
- Yet fat she is, the merriest in the place,
- And all can know she wears a pretty face.
- But still she never heeds what praise can say,
- But does the work, and oft runs out to play,
- To run about the yard and ramp and noise
- And spring the mop upon the servant boys.
- When old hens noise and cackle every where
- She hurries eager if the eggs are dear,
- And runs to seek them when they lay away
- To get them ready for the market day.
- She gambols with the men and laughs aloud
- And only quarrels when they call her proud.
- _Scandal_
- She hastens out and scarcely pins her clothes
- To hear the news and tell the news she knows;
- She talks of sluts, marks each unmended gown,
- Her self the dirtiest slut in all the town.
- She stands with eager haste at slander's tale,
- And drinks the news as drunkards drink their ale.
- Excuse is ready at the biggest lie--
- She only heard it and it passes bye.
- The very cat looks up and knows her face
- And hastens to the chair to get the place;
- When once set down she never goes away,
- Till tales are done and talk has nought to say.
- She goes from house to house the village oer,
- Her slander bothers everybody's door.
- _Quail's Nest_
- I wandered out one rainy day
- And heard a bird with merry joys
- Cry "wet my foot" for half the way;
- I stood and wondered at the noise,
- When from my foot a bird did flee--
- The rain flew bouncing from her breast
- I wondered what the bird could be,
- And almost trampled on her nest.
- The nest was full of eggs and round--
- I met a shepherd in the vales,
- And stood to tell him what I found.
- He knew and said it was a quail's,
- For he himself the nest had found,
- Among the wheat and on the green,
- When going on his daily round,
- With eggs as many as fifteen.
- Among the stranger birds they feed,
- Their summer flight is short and low;
- There's very few know where they breed,
- And scarcely any where they go.
- _Market Day_
- With arms and legs at work and gentle stroke
- That urges switching tail nor mends his pace,
- On an old ribbed and weather beaten horse,
- The farmer goes jogtrotting to the fair.
- Both keep their pace that nothing can provoke
- Followed by brindled dog that snuffs the ground
- With urging bark and hurries at his heels.
- His hat slouched down, and great coat buttoned close
- Bellied like hooped keg, and chuffy face
- Red as the morning sun, he takes his round
- And talks of stock: and when his jobs are done
- And Dobbin's hay is eaten from the rack,
- He drinks success to corn in language hoarse,
- And claps old Dobbin's hide, and potters back.
- _Stonepit_
- The passing traveller with wonder sees
- A deep and ancient stonepit full of trees;
- So deep and very deep the place has been,
- The church might stand within and not be seen.
- The passing stranger oft with wonder stops
- And thinks he een could walk upon their tops,
- And often stoops to see the busy crow,
- And stands above and sees the eggs below;
- And while the wild horse gives its head a toss,
- The squirrel dances up and runs across.
- The boy that stands and kills the black nosed bee
- Dares down as soon as magpies' nests are found,
- And wonders when he climbs the highest tree
- To find it reaches scarce above the ground.
- _"The Lass With The Delicate Air"_
- Timid and smiling, beautiful and shy,
- She drops her head at every passer bye.
- Afraid of praise she hurries down the streets
- And turns away from every smile she meets.
- The forward clown has many things to say
- And holds her by the gown to make her stay,
- The picture of good health she goes along,
- Hale as the morn and happy as her song.
- Yet there is one who never feels a fear
- To whisper pleasing fancies in her ear;
- Yet een from him she shuns a rude embrace,
- And stooping holds her hands before her face,--
- She even shuns and fears the bolder wind,
- And holds her shawl, and often looks behind.
- _The Lout_
- For Sunday's play he never makes excuse,
- But plays at taw, and buys his Spanish juice.
- Hard as his toil, and ever slow to speak,
- Yet he gives maidens many a burning cheek;
- For none can pass him but his witless grace
- Of bawdry brings the blushes in her face.
- As vulgar as the dirt he treads upon
- He calls his cows or drives his horses on;
- He knows the lamest cow and strokes her side
- And often tries to mount her back and ride,
- And takes her tail at night in idle play,
- And makes her drag him homeward all the way.
- He knows of nothing but the football match,
- And where hens lay, and when the duck will hatch.
- _Hodge_
- He plays with other boys when work is done,
- But feels too clumsy and too stiff to run,
- Yet where there's mischief he can find a way
- The first to join and last [to run] away.
- What's said or done he never hears or minds
- But gets his pence for all the eggs he finds.
- He thinks his master's horses far the best,
- And always labours longer than the rest.
- In frost and cold though lame he's forced to go--
- The call's more urgent when he journeys slow.
- In surly speed he helps the maids by force
- And feeds the cows and hallos till he's hoarse;
- And when he's lame they only jest and play
- And bid him throw his kiby heels away.
- _Farm Breakfast_
- Maids shout to breakfast in a merry strife,
- And the cat runs to hear the whetted knife,
- And dogs are ever in the way to watch
- The mouldy crust and falling bone to catch.
- The wooden dishes round in haste are set,
- And round the table all the boys are met;
- All know their own save Hodge who would be first,
- But every one his master leaves the worst.
- On every wooden dish, a humble claim,
- Two rude cut letters mark the owner's name;
- From every nook the smile of plenty calls,
- And rusty flitches decorate the walls,
- Moore's Almanack where wonders never cease--
- All smeared with candle snuff and bacon grease.
- _Love and Solitude_
- I hate the very noise of troublous man
- Who did and does me all the harm he can.
- Free from the world I would a prisoner be
- And my own shadow all my company;
- And lonely see the shooting stars appear,
- Worlds rushing into judgment all the year.
- O lead me onward to the loneliest shade,
- The darkest place that quiet ever made,
- Where kingcups grow most beauteous to behold
- And shut up green and open into gold.
- Farewell to poesy--and leave the will;
- Take all the world away--and leave me still
- The mirth and music of a woman's voice,
- That bids the heart be happy and rejoice.
- ASYLUM POEMS
- _Gipsies_
- The snow falls deep; the forest lies alone;
- The boy goes hasty for his load of brakes,
- Then thinks upon the fire and hurries back;
- The gipsy knocks his hands and tucks them up,
- And seeks his squalid camp, half hid in snow,
- Beneath the oak which breaks away the wind,
- And bushes close in snow-like hovel warm;
- There tainted mutton wastes upon the coals,
- And the half-wasted dog squats close and rubs,
- Then feels the heat too strong, and goes aloof;
- He watches well, but none a bit can spare,
- And vainly waits the morsel thrown away.
- Tis thus they live--a picture to the place,
- A quiet, pilfering, unprotected race.
- _The Frightened Ploughman_
- I went in the fields with the leisure I got,
- The stranger might smile but I heeded him not,
- The hovel was ready to screen from a shower,
- And the book in my pocket was read in an hour.
- The bird came for shelter, but soon flew away;
- The horse came to look, and seemed happy to stay;
- He stood up in quiet, and hung down his head,
- And seemed to be hearing the poem I read.
- The ploughman would turn from his plough in the day
- And wonder what being had come in his way,
- To lie on a molehill and read the day long
- And laugh out aloud when he'd finished his song.
- The pewit turned over and stooped oer my head
- Where the raven croaked loud like the ploughman ill-bred,
- But the lark high above charmed me all the day long,
- So I sat down and joined in the chorus of song.
- The foolhardy ploughman I well could endure,
- His praise was worth nothing, his censure was poor,
- Fame bade me go on and I toiled the day long
- Till the fields where he lived should be known in my song.
- _Farewell_
- Farewell to the bushy clump close to the river
- And the flags where the butter-bump hides in for ever;
- Farewell to the weedy nook, hemmed in by waters;
- Farewell to the miller's brook and his three bonny daughters;
- Farewell to them all while in prison I lie--
- In the prison a thrall sees nought but the sky.
- Shut out are the green fields and birds in the bushes;
- In the prison yard nothing builds, blackbirds or thrushes,
- Farewell to the old mill and dash of the waters,
- To the miller and, dearer still, to his three bonny daughters.
- In the nook, the large burdock grows near the green willow;
- In the flood, round the moorcock dashes under the billow;
- To the old mill farewell, to the lock, pens, and waters,
- To the miller himsel', and his three bonny daughters.
- _The Old Year_
- The Old Year's gone away
- To nothingness and night:
- We cannot find him all the day
- Nor hear him in the night:
- He left no footstep, mark or place
- In either shade or sun:
- The last year he'd a neighbour's face,
- In this he's known by none.
- All nothing everywhere:
- Mists we on mornings see
- Have more of substance when they're here
- And more of form than he.
- He was a friend by every fire,
- In every cot and hall--
- A guest to every heart's desire,
- And now he's nought at all.
- Old papers thrown away,
- Old garments cast aside,
- The talk of yesterday,
- Are things identified;
- But time once torn away
- No voices can recall:
- The eve of New Year's Day
- Left the Old Year lost to all.
- _The Yellowhammer_
- When shall I see the white-thorn leaves agen,
- And yellowhammers gathering the dry bents
- By the dyke side, on stilly moor or fen,
- Feathered with love and nature's good intents?
- Rude is the tent this architect invents,
- Rural the place, with cart ruts by dyke side.
- Dead grass, horse hair, and downy-headed bents
- Tied to dead thistles--she doth well provide,
- Close to a hill of ants where cowslips bloom
- And shed oer meadows far their sweet perfume.
- In early spring, when winds blow chilly cold,
- The yellowhammer, trailing grass, will come
- To fix a place and choose an early home,
- With yellow breast and head of solid gold.
- _Autumn_
- The thistle-down's flying, though the winds are all still,
- On the green grass now lying, now mounting the hill,
- The spring from the fountain now boils like a pot;
- Through stones past the counting it bubbles red hot.
- The ground parched and cracked is like overbaked bread,
- The greensward all wracked is, bents dried up and dead.
- The fallow fields glitter like water indeed,
- And gossamers twitter, flung from weed unto weed.
- Hill tops like hot iron glitter bright in the sun,
- And the rivers we're eying burn to gold as they run;
- Burning hot is the ground, liquid gold is the air;
- Whoever looks round sees Eternity there.
- _Song_
- I peeled bits of straws and I got switches too
- From the grey peeling willow as idlers do,
- And I switched at the flies as I sat all alone
- Till my flesh, blood, and marrow was turned to dry bone.
- My illness was love, though I knew not the smart,
- But the beauty of love was the blood of my heart.
- Crowded places, I shunned them as noises too rude
- And fled to the silence of sweet solitude.
- Where the flower in green darkness buds, blossoms, and fades,
- Unseen of all shepherds and flower-loving maids--
- The hermit bees find them but once and away.
- There I'll bury alive and in silence decay.
- I looked on the eyes of fair woman too long,
- Till silence and shame stole the use of my tongue:
- When I tried to speak to her I'd nothing to say,
- So I turned myself round and she wandered away.
- When she got too far off, why, I'd something to tell,
- So I sent sighs behind her and walked to my cell.
- Willow switches I broke and peeled bits of straws,
- Ever lonely in crowds, in Nature's own laws--
- My ball room the pasture, my music the bees,
- My drink was the fountain, my church the tall trees.
- Who ever would love or be tied to a wife
- When it makes a man mad all the days of his life?
- _The Winter's Come_
- Sweet chestnuts brown like soling leather turn;
- The larch trees, like the colour of the Sun;
- That paled sky in the Autumn seemed to burn,
- What a strange scene before us now does run--
- Red, brown, and yellow, russet, black, and dun;
- White thorn, wild cherry, and the poplar bare;
- The sycamore all withered in the sun.
- No leaves are now upon the birch tree there:
- All now is stript to the cold wintry air.
- See, not one tree but what has lost its leaves--
- And yet the landscape wears a pleasing hue.
- The winter chill on his cold bed receives
- Foliage which once hung oer the waters blue.
- Naked and bare the leafless trees repose.
- Blue-headed titmouse now seeks maggots rare,
- Sluggish and dull the leaf-strewn river flows;
- That is not green, which was so through the year
- Dark chill November draweth to a close.
- Tis Winter, and I love to read indoors,
- When the Moon hangs her crescent up on high;
- While on the window shutters the wind roars,
- And storms like furies pass remorseless by.
- How pleasant on a feather bed to lie,
- Or, sitting by the fire, in fancy soar
- With Dante or with Milton to regions high,
- Or read fresh volumes we've not seen before,
- Or oer old Burton's Melancholy pore.
- _Summer Winds_
- The wind waves oer the meadows green
- And shakes my own wild flowers
- And shifts about the moving scene
- Like the life of summer hours;
- The little bents with reedy head,
- The scarce seen shapes of flowers,
- All kink about like skeins of thread
- In these wind-shaken hours.
- All stir and strife and life and bustle
- In everything around one sees;
- The rushes whistle, sedges rustle,
- The grass is buzzing round like bees;
- The butterflies are tossed about
- Like skiffs upon a stormy sea;
- The bees are lost amid the rout
- And drop in [their] perplexity.
- Wilt thou be mine, thou bonny lass?
- Thy drapery floats so gracefully;
- We'll walk along the meadow grass,
- We'll stand beneath the willow tree.
- We'll mark the little reeling bee
- Along the grassy ocean rove,
- Tossed like a little boat at sea,
- And interchange our vows of love.
- _Bonny Lassie O!_
- O the evening's for the fair, bonny lassie O!
- To meet the cooler air and walk an angel there,
- With the dark dishevelled hair,
- Bonny lassie O!
- The bloom's on the brere, bonny lassie O!
- Oak apples on the tree; and wilt thou gang to see
- The shed I've made for thee,
- Bonny lassie O!
- Tis agen the running brook, bonny lassie O!
- In a grassy nook hard by, with a little patch of sky,
- And a bush to keep us dry,
- Bonny lassie O!
- There's the daisy all the year, bonny lassie O!
- There's the king-cup bright as gold, and the speedwell never cold,
- And the arum leaves unrolled,
- Bonny lassie O!
- O meet me at the shed, bonny lassie O!
- With a woodbine peeping in, and the roses like thy skin
- Blushing, thy praise to win,
- Bonny lassie O!
- I will meet thee there at e'en, bonny lassie O!
- When the bee sips in the bean, and grey willow branches lean,
- And the moonbeam looks between,
- Bonny lassie O!
- _Meet Me in the Green Glen_
- Love, meet me in the green glen,
- Beside the tall elm tree,
- Where the sweet briar smells so sweet agen;
- There come with me,
- Meet me in the green glen.
- Meet me at the sunset
- Down in the green glen,
- Where we've often met
- By hawthorn tree and foxes' den,
- Meet me in the green glen.
- Meet me in the green glen,
- By sweet briar bushes there;
- Meet me by your own sen,
- Where the wild thyme blossoms fair.
- Meet me in the green glen.
- Meet me by the sweet briar,
- By the mole hill swelling there;
- When the West glows like a fire
- God's crimson bed is there.
- Meet me in the green glen.
- _Love Cannot Die_
- In crime and enmity they lie
- Who sin and tell us love can die,
- Who say to us in slander's breath
- That love belongs to sin and death.
- From heaven it came on angel's wing
- To bloom on earth, eternal spring;
- In falsehood's enmity they lie
- Who sin and tell us love can die.
- Twas born upon an angel's breast.
- The softest dreams, the sweetest rest,
- The brightest sun, the bluest sky,
- Are love's own home and canopy.
- The thought that cheers this heart of mine
- Is that of love; love so divine
- They sin who say in slander's breath
- That love belongs to sin and death.
- The sweetest voice that lips contain,
- The sweetest thought that leaves the brain,
- The sweetest feeling of the heart--
- There's pleasure in its very smart.
- The scent of rose and cinnamon
- Is not like love remembered on;
- In falsehood's enmity they lie
- Who sin and tell us love can die.
- _Peggy_
- Peggy said good morning and I said good bye,
- When farmers dib the corn and laddies sow the rye.
- Young Peggy's face was common sense and I was rather shy
- When I met her in the morning when the farmers sow the rye.
- Her half laced boots fit tightly as she tripped along the grass,
- And she set her foot so lightly where the early bee doth pass.
- Oh Peggy was a young thing, her face was common sense,
- I courted her about the spring and loved her ever thence.
- Oh Peggy was the young thing and bonny as to size;
- Her lips were cherries of the spring and hazel were her eyes.
- Oh Peggy she was straight and tall as is the poplar tree,
- Smooth as the freestone of the wall, and very dear to me.
- Oh Peggy's gown was chocolate and full of cherries white;
- I keep a bit on't for her sake and love her day and night.
- I drest myself just like a prince and Peggy went to woo,
- But she's been gone some ten years since, and I know not what to do.
- _The Crow Sat on the Willow_
- The crow sat on the willow tree
- A-lifting up his wings,
- And glossy was his coat to see,
- And loud the ploughman sings,
- "I love my love because I know
- The milkmaid she loves me";
- And hoarsely croaked the glossy crow
- Upon the willow tree.
- "I love my love" the ploughman sung,
- And all the fields with music rung.
- "I love my love, a bonny lass,
- She keeps her pails so bright,
- And blythe she trips the dewy grass
- At morning and at night.
- A cotton dress her morning gown,
- Her face was rosy health:
- She traced the pastures up and down
- And nature was her wealth."
- He sung, and turned each furrow down,
- His sweetheart's love in cotton gown.
- "My love is young and handsome
- As any in the town,
- She's worth a ploughman's ransom
- In the drab cotton gown."
- He sang and turned his furrow oer
- And urged his team along,
- While on the willow as before
- The old crow croaked his song:
- The ploughman sung his rustic lay
- And sung of Phoebe all the day.
- The crow he was in love no doubt
- And [so were] many things:
- The ploughman finished many a bout,
- And lustily he sings,
- "My love she is a milking maid
- With red rosy cheek;
- Of cotton drab her gown was made,
- I loved her many a week."
- His milking maid the ploughman sung
- Till all the fields around him rung.
- _Now is Past_
- _Now_ is past--the happy _now_
- When we together roved
- Beneath the wildwood's oak-tree bough
- And Nature said we loved.
- Winter's blast
- The _now_ since then has crept between,
- And left us both apart.
- Winters that withered all the green
- Have froze the beating heart.
- Now is past.
- _Now_ is past since last we met
- Beneath the hazel bough;
- Before the evening sun was set
- Her shadow stretched below.
- Autumn's blast
- Has stained and blighted every bough;
- Wild strawberries like her lips
- Have left the mosses green below,
- Her bloom's upon the hips.
- Now is past.
- _Now_ is past, is changed agen,
- The woods and fields are painted new.
- Wild strawberries which both gathered then,
- None know now where they grew.
- The skys oercast.
- Wood strawberries faded from wood sides,
- Green leaves have all turned yellow;
- No Adelaide walks the wood rides,
- True love has no bed-fellow.
- Now is past.
- _Song_
- I wish I was where I would be,
- With love alone to dwell,
- Was I but her or she but me,
- Then love would all be well.
- I wish to send my thoughts to her
- As quick as thoughts can fly,
- But as the winds the waters stir
- The mirrors change and fly.
- _First Love_
- I ne'er was struck before that hour
- With love so sudden and so sweet.
- Her face it bloomed like a sweet flower
- And stole my heart away complete.
- My face turned pale as deadly pale,
- My legs refused to walk away,
- And when she looked "what could I ail?"
- My life and all seemed turned to clay.
- And then my blood rushed to my face
- And took my sight away.
- The trees and bushes round the place
- Seemed midnight at noonday.
- I could not see a single thing,
- Words from my eyes did start;
- They spoke as chords do from the string
- And blood burnt round my heart.
- Are flowers the winter's choice?
- Is love's bed always snow?
- She seemed to hear my silent voice
- And love's appeal to know.
- I never saw so sweet a face
- As that I stood before:
- My heart has left its dwelling-place
- And can return no more.
- _Mary Bayfield_
- How beautiful the summer night
- When birds roost on the mossy tree,
- When moon and stars are shining bright
- And home has gone the weary bee!
- Then Mary Bayfield seeks the glen,
- The white hawthorn and grey oak tree,
- And nought but heaven can tell me then
- How dear thy beauty is to me.
- Dear is the dewdrop to the flower,
- The old wall to the weary bee,
- And silence to the evening hour,
- And ivy to the stooping tree.
- Dearer than these, than all beside,
- Than blossoms to the moss-rose tree,
- The maid who wanders by my side--
- Sweet Mary Bayfield is to me.
- Sweet is the moonlight on the tree,
- The stars above the glassy lake,
- That from the bottom look at me
- Through shadows of the crimping brake.
- Such are sweet things--but sweeter still
- Than these and all beside I see
- The maid whose look my heart can thrill,
- My Mary Bayfield's look to me.
- O Mary with the dark brown hair,
- The rosy cheek, the beaming eye,
- I would thy shade were ever near;
- Then would I never grieve or sigh.
- I love thee, Mary dearly love--
- There's nought so fair on earth I see,
- There's nought so dear in heaven above,
- As Mary Bayfield is to me.
- _The Maid of Jerusalem_
- Maid of Jerusalem, by the Dead Sea,
- I wandered all sorrowing thinking of thee,--
- Thy city in ruins, thy kindred deplored,
- All fallen and lost by the Ottoman's sword.
- I saw thee sit there in disconsolate sighs,
- Where the hall of thy fathers a ruined heap lies.
- Thy fair finger showed me the place where they trod,
- In thy childhood where flourished the city of God.
- The place where they fell and the scenes where they lie,
- In the tomb of Siloa--the tear in her eye
- She stifled: transfixed there it grew like a pearl,
- Beneath the dark lash of the sweet Jewish Girl.
- Jerusalem is fallen! still thou art in bloom,
- As fresh as the ivy around the lone tomb,
- And fair as the lily of morning that waves
- Its sweet-scented bells over desolate graves.
- When I think of Jerusalem in kingdoms yet free,
- I shall think of its ruins and think upon thee;
- Thou beautiful Jewess, content thou mayest roam;
- A bright spot in Eden still blooms as thy home.
- Song
- I would not feign a single sigh
- Nor weep a single tear for thee:
- The soul within these orbs burns dry;
- A desert spreads where love should be.
- I would not be a worm to crawl
- A writhing suppliant in thy way;
- For love is life, is heaven, and all
- The beams of an immortal day.
- For sighs are idle things and vain,
- And tears for idiots vainly fall.
- I would not kiss thy face again
- Nor round thy shining slippers crawl.
- Love is the honey, not the bee,
- Nor would I turn its sweets to gall
- For all the beauty found in thee,
- Thy lily neck, rose cheek, and all.
- I would not feign a single tale
- Thy kindness or thy love to seek;
- Nor sigh for Jenny of the Vale,
- Her ruby smile or rosy cheek.
- I would not have a pain to own
- For those dark curls and those bright eyes
- A frowning lip, a heart of stone,
- False love and folly I despise.
- _Thou Flower of Summer_
- When in summer thou walkest
- In the meads by the river,
- And to thyself talkest,
- Dost thou think of one ever--
- A lost and a lorn one
- That adores thee and loves thee?
- And when happy morn's gone,
- And nature's calm moves thee,
- Leaving thee to thy sleep like an angel at rest,
- Does the one who adores thee still live in thy breast?
- Does nature eer give thee
- Love's past happy vision,
- And wrap thee and leave thee
- In fancies elysian?
- Thy beauty I clung to,
- As leaves to the tree;
- When thou fair and young too
- Looked lightly on me,
- Till love came upon thee like the sun to the west
- And shed its perfuming and bloom on thy breast.
- _The Swallow_
- Pretty swallow, once again
- Come and pass me in the rain.
- Pretty swallow, why so shy?
- Pass again my window by.
- The horsepond where he dips his wings,
- The wet day prints it full of rings.
- The raindrops on his [ ] track
- Lodge like pearls upon his back.
- Then again he dips his wing
- In the wrinkles of the spring,
- Then oer the rushes flies again,
- And pearls roll off his back like rain.
- Pretty little swallow, fly
- Village doors and windows by,
- Whisking oer the garden pales
- Where the blackbird finds the snails;
- Whewing by the ladslove tree
- For something only seen by thee;
- Pearls that on the red rose hing
- Fall off shaken by thy wing.
- On that low thatched cottage stop,
- In the sooty chimney pop,
- Where thy wife and family
- Every evening wait for thee.
- _The Sailor-Boy_
- Tis three years and a quarter since I left my own fireside
- To go aboard a ship through love, and plough the ocean wide.
- I crossed my native fields, where the scarlet poppies grew,
- And the groundlark left his nest like a neighbour which I knew.
- The pigeons from the dove cote cooed over the old lane,
- The crow flocks from the oakwood went flopping oer the grain;
- Like lots of dear old neighbours whom I shall see no more
- They greeted me that morning I left the English shore.
- The sun was just a-rising above the heath of furze,
- And the shadows grow to giants; that bright ball never stirs:
- There the shepherds lay with their dogs by their side,
- And they started up and barked as my shadow they espied.
- A maid of early morning twirled her mop upon the moor;
- I wished her my farewell before she closed the door.
- My friends I left behind me for other places new,
- Crows and pigeons all were strangers as oer my head they flew.
- Trees and bushes were all strangers, the hedges and the lanes,
- The steeples and the houses and broad untrodden plains.
- I passed the pretty milkmaid with her red and rosy face;
- I knew not where I met her, I was strange to the place.
- At last I saw the ocean, a pleasing sight to me:
- I stood upon the shore of a mighty glorious sea.
- The waves in easy motion went rolling on their way,
- English colours were a-flying where the British squadron lay.
- I left my honest parents, the church clock and the village;
- I left the lads and lasses, the labour and the tillage;
- To plough the briny ocean, which soon became my joy--
- I sat and sang among the shrouds, a lonely sailor-boy.
- _The Sleep of Spring_
- O for that sweet, untroubled rest
- That poets oft have sung!--
- The babe upon its mother's breast,
- The bird upon its young,
- The heart asleep without a pain--
- When shall I know that sleep again?
- When shall I be as I have been
- Upon my mother's breast
- Sweet Nature's garb of verdant green
- To woo to perfect rest--
- Love in the meadow, field, and glen,
- And in my native wilds again?
- The sheep within the fallow field,
- The herd upon the green,
- The larks that in the thistle shield,
- And pipe from morn to e'en--
- O for the pasture, fields, and fen!
- When shall I see such rest again?
- I love the weeds along the fen,
- More sweet than garden flowers,
- For freedom haunts the humble glen
- That blest my happiest hours.
- Here prison injures health and me:
- I love sweet freedom and the free.
- The crows upon the swelling hills,
- The cows upon the lea,
- Sheep feeding by the pasture rills,
- Are ever dear to me,
- Because sweet freedom is their mate,
- While I am lone and desolate.
- I loved the winds when I was young,
- When life was dear to me;
- I loved the song which Nature sung,
- Endearing liberty;
- I loved the wood, the vale, the stream,
- For there my boyhood used to dream.
- There even toil itself was play;
- Twas pleasure een to weep;
- Twas joy to think of dreams by day,
- The beautiful of sleep.
- When shall I see the wood and plain,
- And dream those happy dreams again?
- _Mary Bateman_
- My love she wears a cotton plaid,
- A bonnet of the straw;
- Her cheeks are leaves of roses spread,
- Her lips are like the haw.
- In truth she is as sweet a maid
- As true love ever saw.
- Her curls are ever in my eyes,
- As nets by Cupid flung;
- Her voice will oft my sleep surprise,
- More sweet then ballad sung.
- O Mary Bateman's curling hair!
- I wake, and there is nothing there.
- I wake, and fall asleep again,
- The same delights in visions rise;
- There's nothing can appear more plain
- Than those rose cheeks and those bright eyes.
- I wake again, and all alone
- Sits Darkness on his ebon throne.
- All silent runs the silver Trent,
- The cobweb veils are all wet through,
- A silver bead's on every bent,
- On every leaf a bleb of dew.
- I sighed, the moon it shone so clear;
- Was Mary Bateman walking here?
- _Bonny Mary O!_
- The morning opens fine, bonny Mary O!
- The robin sings his song by the dairy O!
- Where the little Jenny wrens cock their tails among the hens,
- Singing morning's happy songs with Mary O!
- The swallow's on the wing, bonny Mary O!
- Where the rushes fringe the spring, bonny Mary O!
- Where the cowslips do unfold, shaking tassels all of gold,
- Which make the milk so sweet, bonny Mary O!
- There's the yellowhammer's nest, bonny Mary O!
- Where she hides her golden breast, bonny Mary O!
- On her mystic eggs she dwells, with strange writing on their shells,
- Hid in the mossy grass, bonny Mary O!
- There the spotted cow gets food, bonny Mary O!
- And chews her peaceful cud, bonny Mary O!
- In the mole-hills and the bushes, and the clear brook fringed with rushes
- To fill the evening pail, bonny Mary O!
- The cowpond once agen, bonny Mary O!
- Lies dimpled like thy sen, bonny Mary O!
- Where the gnat swarms fall and rise under evening's mellow skies,
- And on flags sleep dragon flies, bonny Mary O!
- And I will meet thee there, bonny Mary O!
- When a-milking you repair, bonny Mary O!
- And I'll kiss thee on the grass, my buxom, bonny lass,
- And be thine own for aye, bonny Mary O!
- _Where She Told Her Love_
- I saw her crop a rose
- Right early in the day,
- And I went to kiss the place
- Where she broke the rose away
- And I saw the patten rings
- Where she oer the stile had gone,
- And I love all other things
- Her bright eyes look upon.
- If she looks upon the hedge or up the leafing tree,
- The whitethorn or the brown oak are made dearer things to me.
- I have a pleasant hill
- Which I sit upon for hours,
- Where she cropt some sprigs of thyme
- And other little flowers;
- And she muttered as she did it
- As does beauty in a dream,
- And I loved her when she hid it
- On her breast, so like to cream,
- Near the brown mole on her neck that to me a diamond shone
- Then my eye was like to fire, and my heart was like to stone.
- There is a small green place
- Where cowslips early curled,
- Which on Sabbath day I trace,
- The dearest in the world.
- A little oak spreads oer it,
- And throws a shadow round,
- A green sward close before it,
- The greenest ever found:
- There is not a woodland nigh nor is there a green grove,
- Yet stood the fair maid nigh me and told me all her love.
- _Autumn_
- I love the fitful gust that shakes
- The casement all the day,
- And from the glossy elm tree takes
- The faded leaves away,
- Twirling them by the window pane
- With thousand others down the lane.
- I love to see the shaking twig
- Dance till the shut of eve,
- The sparrow on the cottage rig,
- Whose chirp would make believe
- That Spring was just now flirting by
- In Summer's lap with flowers to lie.
- I love to see the cottage smoke
- Curl upwards through the trees,
- The pigeons nestled round the cote
- On November days like these;
- The cock upon the dunghill crowing,
- The mill sails on the heath a-going.
- The feather from the raven's breast
- Falls on the stubble lea,
- The acorns near the old crow's nest
- Drop pattering down the tree;
- The grunting pigs, that wait for all,
- Scramble and hurry where they fall.
- _Invitation to Eternity_
- Say, wilt thou go with me, sweet maid,
- Say, maiden, wilt thou go with me
- Through the valley-depths of shade,
- Of bright and dark obscurity;
- Where the path has lost its way,
- Where the sun forgets the day,
- Where there's nor light nor life to see,
- Sweet maiden, wilt thou go with me?
- Where stones will turn to flooding streams,
- Where plains will rise like ocean's waves,
- Where life will fade like visioned dreams
- And darkness darken into caves,
- Say, maiden, wilt thou go with me
- Through this sad non-identity
- Where parents live and are forgot,
- And sisters live and know us not?
- Say, maiden, wilt thou go with me
- In this strange death of life to be,
- To live in death and be the same,
- Without this life or home or name,
- At once to be and not to be--
- That was and is not--yet to see
- Things pass like shadows, and the sky
- Above, below, around us lie?
- The land of shadows wilt thou trace,
- Nor look nor know each other's face;
- The present marred with reason gone,
- And past and present both as one?
- Say, maiden, can thy life be led
- To join the living and the dead?
- Then trace thy footsteps on with me:
- We are wed to one eternity.
- _The Maple Tree_
- The maple with its tassel flowers of green,
- That turns to red a staghorn-shaped seed,
- Just spreading out its scolloped leaves is seen,
- Of yellowish hue, yet beautifully green;
- Bark ribbed like corderoy in seamy screed,
- That farther up the stem is smoother seen,
- Where the white hemlock with white umbel flowers
- Up each spread stoven to the branches towers;
- And moss around the stoven spreads, dark green,
- And blotched leaved orchis, and the blue bell flowers;
- Thickly they grow and neath the leaves are seen;
- I love to see them gemmed with morning hours,
- I love the lone green places where they be,
- And the sweet clothing of the maple tree.
- _House or Window Flies_
- These little window dwellers, in cottages and halls, were always
- entertaining to me; after dancing in the window all day from sunrise
- to sunset they would sip of the tea, drink of the beer, and eat of the
- sugar, and be welcome all summer long. They look like things of mind
- or fairies, and seem pleased or dull as the weather permits. In many
- clean cottages and genteel houses, they are allowed every liberty to
- creep, fly, or do as they like; and seldom or ever do wrong. In fact
- they are the small or dwarfish portion of our own family, and so many
- fairy familiars that we know and treat as one of ourselves.
- _Dewdrops_
- The dewdrops on every blade of grass are so much like silver drops
- that I am obliged to stoop down as I walk to see if they are pearls,
- and those sprinkled on the ivy-woven beds of primroses underneath the
- hazels, whitethorns and maples are so like gold beads that I stooped
- down to feel if they were hard, but they melted from my finger. And
- where the dew lies on the primrose, the violet and whitethorn leaves
- they are emerald and beryl, yet nothing more than the dews of the
- morning on the budding leaves; nay, the road grasses are covered with
- gold and silver beads, and the further we go the brighter they seem to
- shine, like solid gold and silver. It is nothing more than the sun's
- light and shade upon them in the dewy morning; every thorn-point and
- every bramble-spear has its trembling ornament: till the wind gets
- a little brisker, and then all is shaken off, and all the shining
- jewelry passes away into a common spring morning full of budding
- leaves, primroses, violets, vernal speedwell, bluebell and orchis, and
- commonplace objects.
- _Fragment_
- The cataract, whirling down the precipice,
- Elbows down rocks and, shouldering, thunders through.
- Roars, howls, and stifled murmurs never cease;
- Hell and its agonies seem hid below.
- Thick rolls the mist, that smokes and falls in dew;
- The trees and greenwood wear the deepest green.
- Horrible mysteries in the gulph stare through,
- Roars of a million tongues, and none knows what they mean.
- _From "A Rhapsody"_
- Sweet solitude, what joy to be alone--
- In wild, wood-shady dell to stay for hours.
- Twould soften hearts if they were hard as stone
- To see glad butterflies and smiling flowers.
- Tis pleasant in these quiet lonely places,
- Where not the voice of man our pleasure mars,
- To see the little bees with coal black faces
- Gathering sweets from little flowers like stars.
- The wind seems calling, though not understood.
- A voice is speaking; hark, it louder calls.
- It echoes in the far-outstretching wood.
- First twas a hum, but now it loudly squalls;
- And then the pattering rain begins to fall,
- And it is hushed--the fern leaves scarcely shake,
- The tottergrass it scarcely stirs at all.
- And then the rolling thunder gets awake,
- And from black clouds the lightning flashes break.
- The sunshine's gone, and now an April evening
- Commences with a dim and mackerel sky.
- Gold light and woolpacks in the west are leaving,
- And leaden streaks their splendid place supply.
- Sheep ointment seems to daub the dead-hued sky,
- And night shuts up the lightsomeness of day,
- All dark and absent as a corpse's eye.
- Flower, tree, and bush, like all the shadows grey,
- In leaden hues of desolation fade away.
- Tis May; and yet the March flower Dandelion
- Is still in bloom among the emerald grass,
- Shining like guineas with the sun's warm eye on--
- We almost think they are gold as we pass,
- Or fallen stars in a green sea of grass.
- They shine in fields, or waste grounds near the town.
- They closed like painter's brush when even was.
- At length they turn to nothing else but down,
- While the rude winds blow off each shadowy crown.
- _Secret Love_
- I hid my love when young till I
- Couldn't bear the buzzing of a fly;
- I hid my love to my despite
- Till I could not bear to look at light:
- I dare not gaze upon her face
- But left her memory in each place;
- Where eer I saw a wild flower lie
- I kissed and bade my love good bye.
- I met her in the greenest dells
- Where dewdrops pearl the wood blue bells
- The lost breeze kissed her bright blue eye,
- The bee kissed and went singing by,
- A sunbeam found a passage there,
- A gold chain round her neck so fair;
- As secret as the wild bee's song
- She lay there all the summer long.
- I hid my love in field and town
- Till een the breeze would knock me down,
- The bees seemed singing ballads oer,
- The fly's bass turned a lion's roar;
- And even silence found a tongue,
- To haunt me all the summer long;
- The riddle nature could not prove
- Was nothing else but secret love.
- _Bantry Bay_
- On the eighteenth of October we lay in Bantry Bay,
- All ready to set sail, with a fresh and steady gale:
- A fortnight and nine days we in the harbour lay,
- And no breeze ever reached us or strained a single sail.
- Three ships of war had we, and the great guns loaded all;
- But our ships were dead and beaten that had never feared a foe.
- The winds becalmed around us cared for no cannon ball;
- They locked us in the harbour and would not let us go.
- On the nineteenth of October, by eleven of the clock,
- The sky turned black as midnight and a sudden storm came on--
- Awful and sudden--and the cables felt the shock;
- Our anchors they all broke away and every sheet was gone.
- The guns fired off amid the strife, but little hope had we;
- The billows broke above the ship and left us all below.
- The crew with one consent cried "Bear further out to sea,"
- But the waves obeyed no sailor's call, and we knew not where to go.
- She foundered on a rock, while we clambered up the shrouds,
- And staggered like a mountain drunk, wedged in the waves almost.
- The red hot boiling billows foamed in the stooping clouds,
- And in that fatal tempest the whole ship's crew were lost.
- Have pity for poor mariners, ye landsmen, in a storm.
- O think what they endure at sea while safe at home you stay.
- All ye that sleep on beds at night in houses dry and warm,
- O think upon the whole ship's crew, all lost at Bantry Bay.
- _Peggy's the Lady of the Hall_
- And will she leave the lowly clowns
- For silk and satins gay,
- Her woollen aprons and drab gowns
- For lady's cold array?
- And will she leave the wild hedge rose,
- The redbreast and the wren,
- And will she leave her Sunday beaus
- And milk shed in the glen?
- And will she leave her kind friends all
- To be the Lady of the Hall?
- The cowslips bowed their golden drops,
- The white thorn white as sheets;
- The lamb agen the old ewe stops,
- The wren and robin tweets.
- And Peggy took her milk pails still,
- And sang her evening song,
- To milk her cows on Cowslip Hill
- For half the summer long.
- But silk and satins rich and rare
- Are doomed for Peggy still to wear.
- But when the May had turned to haws,
- The hedge rose swelled to hips,
- Peggy was missed without a cause,
- And left us in eclipse.
- The shepherd in the hovel milks,
- Where builds the little wren,
- And Peggy's gone, all clad in silks--
- Far from the happy glen,
- From dog-rose, woodbine, clover, all
- To be the Lady of the Hall.
- _I Dreamt of Robin_
- I opened the casement this morn at starlight,
- And, the moment I got out of bed,
- The daisies were quaking about in their white
- And the cowslip was nodding its head.
- The grass was all shivers, the stars were all bright,
- And Robin that should come at e'en--
- I thought that I saw him, a ghost by moonlight,
- Like a stalking horse stand on the green.
- I went bed agen and did nothing but dream
- Of Robin and moonlight and flowers.
- He stood like a shadow transfixed by a stream,
- And I couldn't forget him for hours.
- I'd just dropt asleep when I dreamed Robin spoke,
- And the casement it gave such a shake,
- As if every pane in the window was broke;
- Such a patter the gravel did make.
- So I up in the morning before the cock crew
- And to strike me a light I sat down.
- I saw from the door all his track in the dew
- And, I guess, called "Come in and sit down."
- And one, sure enough, tramples up to the door,
- And who but young Robin his sen?
- And ere the old folks were half willing to stir
- We met, kissed, and parted agen.
- _The Peasant Poet_
- He loved the brook's soft sound,
- The swallow swimming by.
- He loved the daisy-covered ground,
- The cloud-bedappled sky.
- To him the dismal storm appeared
- The very voice of God;
- And when the evening rack was reared
- Stood Moses with his rod.
- And everything his eyes surveyed,
- The insects in the brake,
- Were creatures God Almighty made,
- He loved them for His sake--
- A silent man in life's affairs,
- A thinker from a boy,
- A peasant in his daily cares,
- A poet in his joy.
- _To John Clare_
- Well, honest John, how fare you now at home?
- The spring is come, and birds are building nests;
- The old cock robin to the stye is come,
- With olive feathers and its ruddy breast;
- And the old cock, with wattles and red comb,
- Struts with the hens, and seems to like some best,
- Then crows, and looks about for little crumbs,
- Swept out by little folks an hour ago;
- The pigs sleep in the stye; the bookman comes--
- The little boy lets home-close nesting go,
- And pockets tops and taws, where daisies bloom,
- To look at the new number just laid down,
- With lots of pictures, and good stories too,
- And Jack the Giant-killer's high renown.
- _Feb._ 10, 1860.
- _Early Spring_
- The Spring is come, and Spring flowers coming too,
- The crocus, patty kay, the rich hearts' ease;
- The polyanthus peeps with blebs of dew,
- And daisy flowers; the buds swell on the trees;
- While oer the odd flowers swim grandfather bees
- In the old homestead rests the cottage cow;
- The dogs sit on their haunches near the pail,
- The least one to the stranger growls "bow wow,"
- Then hurries to the door and cocks his tail,
- To knaw the unfinished bone; the placid cow
- Looks oer the gate; the thresher's lumping flail
- Is all the noise the spring encounters now.
- _May_ 28, 1860.
- _Clock-a-Clay_
- In the cowslip pips I lie,
- Hidden from the buzzing fly,
- While green grass beneath me lies,
- Pearled with dew like fishes' eyes,
- Here I lie, a clock-a-clay,
- Waiting for the time of day.
- While the forest quakes surprise,
- And the wild wind sobs and sighs,
- My home rocks as like to fall,
- On its pillar green and tall;
- When the pattering rain drives by
- Clock-a-clay keeps warm and dry.
- Day by day and night by night,
- All the week I hide from sigh;
- In the cowslip pips I lie,
- In rain and dew still warm and dry;
- Day and night, and night and day,
- Red, black-spotted clock-a-clay.
- My home shakes in wind and showers,
- Pale green pillar topped with flowers,
- Bending at the wild wind's breath,
- Till I touch the grass beneath;
- Here I live, lone clock-a-clay,
- Watching for the time of day.
- _Little Trotty Wagtail_
- Little trotty wagtail he went in the rain,
- And tittering, tottering sideways he neer got straight again,
- He stooped to get a worm, and looked up to get a fly,
- And then he flew away ere his feathers they were dry.
- Little trotty wagtail, he waddled in the mud,
- And left his little footmarks, trample where he would.
- He waddled in the water-pudge, and waggle went his tail,
- And chirrupt up his wings to dry upon the garden rail.
- Little trotty wagtail, you nimble all about,
- And in the dimpling water-pudge you waddle in and out;
- Your home is nigh at hand, and in the warm pig-stye,
- So, little Master Wagtail, I'll bid you a good-bye.
- _Graves of Infants_
- Infant' graves are steps of angels, where
- Earth's brightest gems of innocence repose.
- God is their parent, and they need no tear;
- He takes them to His bosom from earth's woes,
- A bud their lifetime and a flower their close.
- Their spirits are an Iris of the skies,
- Needing no prayers; a sunset's happy close.
- Gone are the bright rays of their soft blue eyes;
- Flowers weep in dew-drops oer them, and the gale gently sighs
- Their lives were nothing but a sunny shower,
- Melting on flowers as tears melt from the eye.
- Their deaths were dew-drops on Heaven's amaranth bower,
- And tolled on flowers as Summer gales went by.
- They bowed and trembled, and they left no sigh,
- And the sun smiled to show their end was well.
- Infants have nought to weep for ere they die;
- All prayers are needless, beads they need not tell,
- White flowers their mourners are, Nature their passing bell.
- _The Dying Child_
- He could not die when trees were green,
- For he loved the time too well.
- His little hands, when flowers were seen,
- Were held for the bluebell,
- As he was carried oer the green.
- His eye glanced at the white-nosed bee;
- He knew those children of the Spring:
- When he was well and on the lea
- He held one in his hands to sing,
- Which filled his heart with glee.
- Infants, the children of the Spring!
- How can an infant die
- When butterflies are on the wing,
- Green grass, and such a sky?
- How can they die at Spring?
- He held his hands for daisies white,
- And then for violets blue,
- And took them all to bed at night
- That in the green fields grew,
- As childhood's sweet delight.
- And then he shut his little eyes,
- And flowers would notice not;
- Birds' nests and eggs caused no surprise,
- He now no blossoms got:
- They met with plaintive sighs.
- When Winter came and blasts did sigh,
- And bare were plain and tree,
- As he for ease in bed did lie
- His soul seemed with the free,
- He died so quietly.
- _Love Lives Beyond the Tomb_
- Love lives beyond
- The tomb, the earth, which fades like dew!
- I love the fond,
- The faithful, and the true.
- Love lives in sleep,
- The happiness of healthy dreams:
- Eve's dews may weep,
- But love delightful seems.
- Tis seen in flowers,
- And in the morning's pearly dew;
- In earth's green hours,
- And in the heaven's eternal blue.
- Tis heard in Spring
- When light and sunbeams, warm and kind,
- On angel's wing
- Bring love and music to the mind.
- And where is voice,
- So young, so beautiful, and sweet
- As Nature's choice,
- Where Spring and lovers meet?
- Love lives beyond
- The tomb, the earth, the flowers, and dew.
- I love the fond,
- The faithful, young and true.
- _I Am_
- I AM: yet what I am none cares or knows,
- My friends forsake me like a memory lost;
- I am the self-consumer of my woes,
- They rise and vanish in oblivious host,
- Like shades in love and death's oblivion lost;
- And yet I am, and live with shadows tost
- Into the nothingness of scorn and noise,
- Into the living sea of waking dreams,
- Where there is neither sense of life nor joys,
- But the vast shipwreck of my life's esteems;
- And een the dearest--that I loved the best--
- Are strange--nay, rather stranger than the rest.
- I long for scenes where man has never trod;
- A place where woman never smiled or wept;
- There to abide with my Creator, GOD,
- And sleep as I in childhood sweetly slept:
- Untroubling and untroubled where I lie;
- The grass below--above the vaulted sky.
- APPENDICES
- _Fragment_
- _A Specimen of Clare's rough drafts_
- In a huge cloud of mountain hue
- The sun sets dark nor shudders through
- One single beam to shine again
- Tis night already in the lane
- The settled clouds in ridges lie
- And some swell mountains calm and high
- Clouds rack and drive before the wind
- In shapes and forms of every kind
- Like waves that rise without the roars
- And rocks that guard untrodden shores
- Now castles pass majestic bye
- And ships in peaceful havens lie
- These gone ten thousand shapes ensue
- For ever beautiful and new
- The scattered clouds lie calm and still
- And day throws gold on every hill
- Their thousand heads in glorys run
- As each were worlds and owned a sun
- The rime it clings to every thing
- It beards the early buds of spring
- The mossy pales the orchard spray
- Are feathered with its silver grey
- Rain drizzles in the face so small
- We scarce can say it rains at all
- The cows turned to the pelting rain
- No longer at their feed remain
- But in the sheltering hovel hides
- That from two propping dotterels strides
- The sky was hilled with red and blue
- With lighter shadows waking through
- Till beautiful and beaming day
- Shed streaks of gold for miles away
- The linnet stopt her song to clean
- Her spreading wings of yellow green
- And turn his head as liking well
- To smooth the dropples as they fell
- One scarce could keep one's path aright
- From gazing upward at the sight
- The boys for wet are forced to pass
- The cuckoo flowers among the grass
- To hasten on as well they may
- For hedge or tree or stack of hay
- Where they for shelter can abide
- Safe seated by its sloping side
- That by the blackthorn thicket cowers
- A shelter in the strongest showers
- The gardens golden gilliflowers
- Are paled with drops of amber showers
- Dead leaves from hedges flirt about
- The chaff from barn doors winnows out
- And down without a wing to flye
- As fast as bees goes sailing bye
- The feather finds a wing to flye
- And dust in wirl puffs winnows bye
- When the rain at midday stops
- Spangles glitter in the drops
- And as each thread a sunbeam was
- Cobwebs glitter in the grass
- The sheep all loaded with the rain
- Try to shake it off in vain
- And ere dryed by wind and sun
- The load will scarcely let them run
- The shepherds foot is sodden through
- And leaves will clout his brushing shoe
- The buttercups in gold alloyed
- And daiseys by the shower destroyed
- The sun is overcast clouds lie
- And thicken over all the sky
- Crows morn and eve will flock in crowds
- To fens and darken like the clouds
- So many is their cumberous flight
- The dull eve darkens into night
- Clouds curl and curdle blue and grey
- And dapple the young summers day
- Through the torn woods the violent rain
- Roars and rattles oer the plain
- And bubbles up in every pool
- Till dykes and ponds are brimming full
- The thickening clouds move slowly on
- Till all the many clouds are one
- That spreads oer all the face of day
- And turns the sunny shine to grey
- Now the meadow water smokes
- And hedgerows dripping oaks
- Fitter patter all around
- And dimple the once dusty ground
- The spinners threads about the weeds
- Are hung with little drops in beads
- Clover silver green becomes
- And purple blue surrounds the plumbs
- And every place breaths fresh and fair
- When morning pays her visit there
- The day is dull the heron trails
- On flapping wings like heavy sails
- And oer the mead so lowly swings
- She fans the herbage with her wings
- The waterfowl with suthering wings
- Dive down the river splash and spring
- Up to the very clouds again
- That sprinkle scuds of coming rain
- That flye and drizzle all the day
- Till dripping grass is turned to grey
- The various clouds that move or lye
- Like mighty travellers in the sky
- All mountainously ridged or curled
- That may have travelled round the world
- The water ruckles into waves
- And loud the neighbouring woodland raves
- All telling of the coming storm
- That fills the village with alarm
- Ere yet the sun is two hours high
- Winds find all quarters of the sky
- With sudden shiftings all around
- And now the grass upon the ground
- And now the leaves they wirl and wirl
- With many a flirting flap and curl
- JOHN CLARE: A BIBLIOGRAPHICAL OUTLINE
- _Works_
- 1
- POEMS DESCRIPTIVE OF RURAL LIFE AND SCENERY. By John Clare, a
- Northamptonshire Peasant. London: Printed for Taylor and Hessey. 1820.
- 12mo. Pp. xxxii, 222. The second and third editions, 1820; excisions
- and alterations occur, but not in all copies. Fourth edition, 1821.
- 2
- THE VILLAGE MINSTREL AND OTHER POEMS. Taylor and Hessey. 1821. Two
- volumes 12mo. Pp. xxviii, 216; vi, 211. Second edition, 1823. The
- two volumes were also, at a later date, bound in one cover lettered
- "Poetic Souvenir."
- 3
- THE SHEPHERD'S CALENDAR; WITH VILLAGE STORIES, AND OTHER POEMS.
- Taylor. 1827. 12mo. Pp. viii, 238.
- 4
- THE RURAL MUSE. London: Whittaker & Co. 1835. 12mo. Pp. x, 175.
- _Biographies and Selections_
- 5
- THE LIFE OF JOHN CLARE. By Frederick Martin, London and Cambridge:
- Macmillan & Co. 1865. Fcp. 8vo. Pp. viii, 301.
- 6
- LIFE AND REMAINS OF JOHN CLARE. By J. L. Cherry. London: Frederick
- Warne & Co. Northampton: J. Taylor & Son. 1873. (Issued in the
- _Chandos Classics_, 1873-1877.) Fcap. 8vo. Pp. xiii, 349.
- 7
- POEMS BY JOHN CLARE, selected and introduced by Norman Gale. With a
- Bibliography by C. Ernest Smith. Geo. E. Over, Rugby, 1901. Fcp. 8vo.
- Pp. 206.
- 8
- POEMS BY JOHN CLARE, edited with an Introduction by Arthur Symons.
- Frowde, London, 1908. I2mo. Pp. 208.
- 9
- NORTHAMPTONSHIRE BOTANOLOGIA. JOHN CLARE. By G. Claridge Druce.
- Pamphlet: no printer's name. 1912. (It includes a memoir, and a
- classification of the flowers described in Clare's poems.)
- _Miscellaneous Clare Volumes_
- 10
- FOUR LETTERS from the Rev. W. Allen, to the Right Honourable Lord
- Radstock, G.C.B., on the Poems of John Clare, the Northamptonshire
- Peasant. Hatchards' (1823). 12mo. Pp. 77.
- 11
- THREE VERY INTERESTING LETTERS (two in curious rhyme) by the
- celebrated poets Clare, Cowper, and Bird. With an Appendix (Clare's
- "Familiar Epistle to a Friend"). ff.13. Charles Clarke's private
- press, Great Totham, 1837. 8vo. Only 25 copies printed. THE JOHN CLARE
- CENTENARY EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. Introduction by C. Dack. Peterborough
- Natural History Society, 1893. Pamphlet. Pp. viii, 28. An edition of
- 50 copies was printed on large paper.
- _Clare's Contributions to Periodicals_
- A detailed list of Clare's work in the magazines is a lengthy affair.
- His main connections were with the "London Magazine" (1821-1823),
- "European Magazine" (1825, 1826), "Literary Magnet" (1826, 1827),
- "Spirit and Manners of the Age" (1828, 1829), the publications of
- William Hone, "Athenaeum" (1831), "Englishman's Magazine" (1831),
- "Literary Receptacle" (1835). He contributed once or twice to the
- "Sheffield Iris," "Morning Post," and the "Champion"; and much of his
- best work seems to have been printed in local papers, such as the
- "Stamford Bee." The annuals often included short poems by him: the
- "Amulet," "Forget-Me-Not," "Friendship's Offering," "Gem," "Juvenile
- Forget-Me-Not," "Literary Souvenir," etc.
- Clare's magazine writings are not always signed, and in the annuals
- his poems often bear no ascription except "By the Northamptonshire
- Peasant." After 1837 he appears not to have contributed poems to
- any journals other than local; though Cyrus Redding in the "English
- Journal," 1841, gives many of his later verses.
- _Incidental Reference Volumes_
- ALLIBONE, S. A.--Dictionary of English Literature.
- ASKHAM, JOHN--Sonnets on the Months ("To John Clare," p. 185)--1863.
- BAKER, Miss A. E.--Glossary of Northamptonshire Words and Phrases
- (Clare contributed)--1854.
- CARY, H. F.--MEMOIR OF; ii. 52-53, 94-95--1847.
- CHAMBERS, R.--Cyclopaedia of English Literature, ii. 386-390--1861.
- DE QUINCZY, T.--London Reminiscences, pp. 143-145--1897.
- DE WILDE, G.--Rambles Round About, and Poems: pp. 30-49--1872.
- DICTIONARY OF NATIONAL BIOGRAPHY.
- DOBELL, B.--Sidelights on Charles Lamb--1903.
- ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA.
- (GALIGNANI'S)--Living Poets of England: pp.172-174--1827.
- HALL, S. C.--Book of Gems: pp. 162-166--1838.
- --A Book of Memories: pp. 107-109.
- HEATH, RICHARD--The English Peasant: pp. 292-319--1893.
- HOLLAND, J.--James Montgomery: iv. 96, 175--1854.
- HOOD, E. P.--The Peerage of Poverty--1870.
- HOOD, THOMAS--Works, ii. 374-377--1882.
- LAMB, CHARLES--LETTERS (Ed. W. Macdonald), ii. 22--1903.
- LOMBROSO, CESARE--The Man of Genius, 162, 205--1891.
- MEN OF THE TIME--_earlier issues_.
- MILES, A. H.--Poets and Poetry of the Nineteenth Century. Vol. "Keats
- to Lytton," pp. 79-106 (by Roden Noel)--1905.
- MITFORD, M. R.--Recollections of a Literary Life. I. 147-163--1857.
- REDDING, CYRUS--Fifty Years' Recollections: ii. 211--1858.
- --Past Celebrities Whom I Have Known: ii. 132 _sq_.
- STODDARD, R. H.--Under the Evening Lamp: pp.120-134--1893.
- SYMONS, ARTHUR--The Romantic Movement in English Poetry: pp. 288-293--1908.
- TAYLOR, JOHN--Bibliotheca Northantonesis--1869.
- THOMAS, EDWARD--Feminine Influence on the Poets--1908.
- --A Literary Pilgrim in England--1917.
- WALKER, HUGH--The Literature of the Victorian Era: pp. 241-245--1913.
- WILSON, JOHN--Recreations of Christopher North, i. 313-318--1842.
- _Magazine Articles, &c._
- 1820 Analectic Magazine
- June Antijacobin Review
- April Eclectic Review
- February Gentleman's Magazine
- January, March London Magazine
- July Monthly Magazine
- March New Monthly
- January, May New Times
- February Northamptonshire County Magazine
- May Quarterly Review
- 1821 October Ackermann's Repository
- June British Critic
- Eclectic Review
- November European Magazine
- Gentleman's Magazine
- October Literary Chronicle
- October Literary Gazette
- November London Magazine
- Monthly Review
- 1822 January Eclectic Review
- 1823 London Magazine
- 1827 June Ackermann's Repository
- June Eclectic Review
- John Bull
- Literary Chronicle
- March Literary Gazette
- Morning Chronicle
- 1829 British Almanac and Companion
- 1831 November Blackwood's
- 1832 October The Alfred
- Athenaeum
- August True Sun
- 1835 July 25 Athenaeum
- August Blackwood's
- July 25 Literary Gazette
- New Monthly
- 1840 June Athenaeum
- June Times
- 1841 May English Journal
- May Gentleman's Magazine
- 1852 August 28 Notes and Queries
- 1855 March 31 Illustrated London News
- 1857 November 21 London Journal
- January Quarterly
- 1858 March 6 Notes and Queries
- 1860 Living Age (U.S.A.)
- 1863 October 31 Notes and Queries
- Once a Week
- 1864 Annual Register
- July Gentleman's Magazine
- July St. James's Magazine
- 1865 June 17 Athenaeum
- Chambers' Journal
- August Eclectic Review
- November 11 Leisure Hour
- Spectator
- 1866 January Englishwoman's Domestic Magazine
- 1869 November Harper's New Monthly
- 1870 June 17 Literary World
- 1872 February 3 Notes and Queries
- Overland (U.S.A.)
- 1873 April Athenaeum
- Leisure Hour
- January Literary World
- Notes and Queries
- Saturday Review, and many other
- reviews of Cherry's volume
- 1874 October 17 Notes and Queries
- 1877 Living Age
- 1886 Northamptonshire Notes and Queries; 97.
- 1890 December 13 All the Year Round
- September 6 Notes and Queries
- 1893 August, September Literary World
- 1901 July Current Literature (U.S.A.)
- Freethinker
- Monthly Review
- 1902 April Gentleman's Magazine
- 1908 December 17 Nation (New York)
- 1909 March Current Literature
- T.P.'s Weekly
- 1913 January South Atlantic Quarterly
- 1914 October Yale Review
- 1915 May Fortnightly Review
- 1917 July 19 Dial (U.S.A.)
- 1919 September Cornhill Magazine
- 1920 February 22 Nation
- March, April Athenaeum
- May Oxford Outlook
- July London Mercury
- October Poetry Review
- In addition to these references, valuable material is contained in
- such local papers as the Northampton Herald, Northampton Mercury,
- Stamford Mercury, Stamford Guardian, and the Peterborough Express,
- and the Peterborough Standard; particularly under the important dates
- 1820, 1864, 1873, and 1893.
- *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, POEMS CHIEFLY FROM MANUSCRIPT ***
- This file should be named 8672-8.txt or 8672-8.zip
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