BEACHY HEAD, &c. |
BEACHY HEAD:with
BY
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ADVERTISEMENT.
AS the following Poems were delivered to the Publisher as early as the month of May last, it may not be thought improper to state the circumstances that have hitherto delayed their appearance.
The fulfilling this duty to the public has since devolved to other hands; for alas! the admired author is now unconscious of their praise or censure, having fallen a victim to a long and painful illness, on the 28th of October last.
The delay which since that period has taken place, has been occasioned partly by the hope of finding a preface to the present publication, which there was some reason to suppose herself had written, and partly from an intention of annexing a short account of her life; but it having been since decided to publish biographical memoirs, and a selection of her correspondence, on a more enlarged plan, and under the immediate authority of her own nearest relatives, it was thought unnecessary; and the motives for deferring the publication are altogether removed.
The public, who have received the several editions of Mrs. Smith's former Poems with unbounded approbation, will, without doubt, admit the claims of the present work to an equal share of their favour; and her friends and ad-
The Poem entitled BEACHY HEAD is not completed according to the original design.␣␣ That the increasing debility of its author has been the cause of its being left in an imperfect state, will it is hoped be a sufficient apology.
There are two Poems in this collection, viz. FLORA, and STUDIES BY THE SEA, which have already been published in Mrs. Smith's
January 31, 1807.
MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.
BEACHY HEAD.
ON thy stupendous summit, rock sublime! | |
That o'er the channel rear'd, half way at sea | |
The mariner at early morning hails, | |
I would recline; while Fancy should go forth, | |
And represent the strange and awful hour | |
Of vast concussion; when the Omnipotent | |
Stretch'd forth his arm, and rent the solid hills, | |
Bidding the impetuous main flood rush between | |
― 2 ― |
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The rifted shores, and from the continent | |
Eternally divided this green isle. | |
Imperial lord of the high southern coast! | |
From thy projecting head-land I would mark | |
Far in the east the shades of night disperse, | |
Melting and thinned, as from the dark blue wave | |
Emerging, brilliant rays of arrowy light | |
Dart from the horizon; when the glorious sun | |
Just lifts above it his resplendent orb. | |
Advances now, with feathery silver touched, | |
The rippling tide of flood; glisten the sands, | |
While, inmates of the chalky clefts that scar | |
Thy sides precipitous, with shrill harsh cry, | |
Their white wings glancing in the level beam, | |
The terns, and gulls, and tarrocks, seek their food, | |
And thy rough hollows echo to the voice | |
― 3 ― |
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Of the gray choughs, and ever restless daws, | |
With clamour, not unlike the chiding hounds, | |
While the lone shepherd, and his baying dog, | |
Drive to thy turfy crest his bleating flock. |
The high meridian of the day is past, | |
And Ocean now, reflecting the calm Heaven, | |
Is of cerulean hue; and murmurs low | |
The tide of ebb, upon the level sands. | |
The sloop, her angular canvas shifting still, | |
Catches the light and variable airs | |
That but a little crisp the summer sea. | |
Dimpling its tranquil surface. |
Afar off, | |
And just emerging from the arch immense | |
― 4 ― |
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Where seem to part the elements, a fleet | |
Of fishing vessels stretch their lesser sails; | |
While more remote, and like a dubious spot | |
Just hanging in the horizon, laden deep, | |
The ship of commerce richly freighted, makes | |
Her slower progress, on her distant voyage, | |
Bound to the orient climates, where the sun | |
Matures the spice within its odorous shell, | |
And, rivalling the gray worm's filmy toil, | |
Bursts from its pod the vegetable down; | |
Which in long turban'd wreaths, from torrid heat | |
Defends the brows of Asia's countless casts. | |
There the Earth hides within her glowing breast | |
The beamy adamant, and the round pearl | |
Enchased in rugged covering; which the slave, | |
With perilous and breathless toil, tears off | |
― 5 ― |
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From the rough sea-rock, deep beneath the waves. | |
These are the toys of Nature; and her sport | |
Of little estimate in Reason's eye: | |
And they who reason, with abhorrence see | |
Man, for such gaudes and baubles, violate | |
The sacred freedom of his fellow man— | |
Erroneous estimate! As Heaven's pure air, | |
Fresh as it blows on this aërial height, | |
Or sound of seas upon the stony strand, | |
Or inland, the gay harmony of birds, | |
And winds that wander in the leafy woods; | |
Are to the unadulterate taste more worth | |
Than the elaborate harmony, brought out | |
From fretted stop, or modulated airs | |
Of vocal science.—So the brightest gems, | |
Glancing resplendent on the regal crown, | |
― 6 ― |
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Or trembling in the high born beauty's ear, | |
Are poor and paltry, to the lovely light | |
Of the fair star, that as the day declines, | |
Attendant on her queen, the crescent moon, | |
Bathes her bright tresses in the eastern wave. | |
For now the sun is verging to the sea, | |
And as he westward sinks, the floating clouds | |
Suspended, move upon the evening gale, | |
And gathering round his orb, as if to shade | |
The insufferable brightness, they resign | |
Their gauzy whiteness; and more warm'd, assume | |
All hues of purple.␣␣There, transparent gold | |
Mingles with ruby tints, and sapphire gleams, | |
And colours, such as Nature through her works | |
Shews only in the ethereal canopy. | |
Thither aspiring Fancy fondly soars, | |
― 7 ― |
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Wandering sublime thro' visionary vales, | |
Where bright pavilions rise, and trophies, fann'd | |
By airs celestial; and adorn'd with wreaths | |
Of flowers that bloom amid elysian bowers. | |
Now bright, and brighter still the colours glow, | |
Till half the lustrous orb within the flood | |
Seems to retire: the flood reflecting still | |
Its splendor, and in mimic glory drest; | |
Till the last ray shot upward, fires the clouds | |
With blazing crimson; then in paler light, | |
Long lines of tenderer radiance, lingering yield | |
To partial darkness; and on the opposing side | |
The early moon distinctly rising, throws | |
Her pearly brilliance on the trembling tide. | |
― 8 ― |
|
The fishermen, who at set seasons pass | |
Many a league off at sea their toiling night, | |
Now hail their comrades, from their daily task | |
Returning; and make ready for their own, | |
With the night tide commencing:—The night tide | |
Bears a dark vessel on, whose hull and sails | |
Mark her a coaster from the north.␣␣Her keel | |
Now ploughs the sand; and sidelong now she leans, | |
While with loud clamours her athletic crew | |
Unload her; and resounds the busy hum | |
Along the wave-worn rocks.␣␣Yet more remote, | |
Where the rough cliff hangs beetling o'er its base, | |
All breathes repose; the water's rippling sound | |
Scarce heard; but now and then the sea-snipe's cry | |
Just tells that something living is abroad; | |
And sometimes crossing on the moonbright line, | |
― 9 ― |
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Glimmers the skiff, faintly discern'd awhile, | |
Then lost in shadow. |
Contemplation here, | |
High on her throne of rock, aloof may sit, | |
And bid recording Memory unfold | |
Her scroll voluminous—bid her retrace | |
The period, when from Neustria's hostile shore | |
The Norman launch'd his galleys, and the bay | |
O'er which that mass of ruin frowns even now | |
In vain and sullen menace, then received | |
The new invaders; a proud martial race, | |
Of Scandinavia the undaunted sons, | |
Whom Dogon, Fier-a-bras, and Humfroi led | |
To conquest: while Trinacria to their power | |
Yielded her wheaten garland; and when thou, | |
― 10 ― |
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Parthenope! within thy fertile bay | |
Receiv'd the victors— |
In the mailed ranks | |
Of Normans landing on the British coast | |
Rode Taillefer; and with astounding voice | |
Thunder'd the war song daring Roland sang | |
First in the fierce contention: vainly brave, | |
One not inglorious struggle England made— | |
But failing, saw the Saxon heptarchy | |
Finish for ever.—Then the holy pile, | |
Yet seen upon the field of conquest, rose, | |
Where to appease heaven's wrath for so much blood, | |
The conqueror bade unceasing prayers ascend, | |
And requiems for the slayers and the slain. | |
But let not modern Gallia form from hence | |
― 11 ― |
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Presumptuous hopes, that ever thou again, | |
Queen of the isles! shalt crouch to foreign arms. | |
The enervate sons of Italy may yield; | |
And the Iberian, all his trophies torn | |
And wrapp'd in Superstition's monkish weed, | |
May shelter his abasement, and put on | |
Degrading fetters. ␣␣Never, never thou! | |
Imperial mistress of the obedient sea; | |
But thou, in thy integrity secure, | |
Shalt now undaunted meet a world in arms. |
England! 'twas where this promontory rears | |
Its rugged brow above the channel wave, | |
Parting the hostile nations, that thy fame, | |
Thy naval fame was tarnish'd, at what time | |
Thou, leagued with the Batavian, gavest to France | |
― 12 ― |
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One day of triumph—triumph the more loud, | |
Because even then so rare.␣␣Oh! well redeem'd, | |
Since, by a series of illustrious men, | |
Such as no other country ever rear'd, | |
To vindicate her cause.␣␣It is a list | |
Which, as Fame echoes it, blanches the cheek | |
Of bold Ambition; while the despot feels | |
The extorted sceptre tremble in his grasp. |
From even the proudest roll by glory fill'd, | |
How gladly the reflecting mind returns | |
To simple scenes of peace and industry, | |
Where, bosom'd in some valley of the hills | |
Stands the lone farm; its gate with tawny ricks | |
Surrounded, and with granaries and sheds, | |
Roof'd with green mosses, and by elms and ash | |
― 13 ― |
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Partially shaded; and not far remov'd | |
The hut of sea-flints built; the humble home | |
Of one, who sometimes watches on the heights, | |
When hid in the cold mist of passing clouds, | |
The flock, with dripping fleeces, are dispers'd | |
O'er the wide down; then from some ridged point | |
That overlooks the sea, his eager eye | |
Watches the bark that for his signal waits | |
To land its merchandize:—Quitting for this | |
Clandestine traffic his more honest toil, | |
The crook abandoning, he braves himself | |
The heaviest snow-storm of December's night, | |
When with conflicting winds the ocean raves, | |
And on the tossing boat, unfearing mounts | |
To meet the partners of the perilous trade, | |
And share their hazard.␣␣Well it were for him, | |
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If no such commerce of destruction known, | |
He were content with what the earth affords | |
To human labour; even where she seems | |
Reluctant most. ␣␣More happy is the hind, | |
Who, with his own hands rears on some black moor, | |
Or turbary, his independent hut | |
Cover'd with heather, whence the slow white smoke | |
Of smouldering peat arises——A few sheep, | |
His best possession, with his children share | |
The rugged shed when wintry tempests blow; | |
But, when with Spring's return the green blades rise | |
Amid the russet heath, the household live | |
Joint tenants of the waste throughout the day, | |
And often, from her nest, among the swamps, | |
Where the gemm'd sun-dew grows, or fring'd buck-bean, | |
They scare the plover, that with plaintive cries | |
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Flutters, as sorely wounded, down the wind. | |
Rude, and but just remov'd from savage life | |
Is the rough dweller among scenes like these, | |
(Scenes all unlike the poet's fabling dreams | |
Describing Arcady)—But he is free; | |
The dread that follows on illegal acts | |
He never feels; and his industrious mate | |
Shares in his labour.␣␣Where the brook is traced | |
By crouding osiers, and the black coot hides | |
Among the plashy reeds, her diving brood, | |
The matron wades; gathering the long green rush | |
That well prepar'd hereafter lends its light | |
To her poor cottage, dark and cheerless else | |
Thro' the drear hours of Winter.␣␣Otherwhile | |
She leads her infant group where charlock grows | |
"Unprofitably gay," or to the fields, | |
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Where congregate the linnet and the finch, | |
That on the thistles, so profusely spread, | |
Feast in the desert; the poor family | |
Early resort, extirpating with care | |
These, and the gaudier mischief of the ground; | |
Then flames the high rais'd heap; seen afar off | |
Like hostile war-fires flashing to the sky. | |
Another task is theirs: On fields that shew | |
As angry Heaven had rain'd sterility, | |
Stony and cold, and hostile to the plough, | |
Where clamouring loud, the evening curlew runs | |
And drops her spotted eggs among the flints; | |
The mother and the children pile the stones | |
In rugged pyramids;—and all this toil | |
They patiently encounter; well content | |
On their flock bed to slumber undisturb'd | |
― 17 ― |
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Beneath the smoky roof they call their own. | |
Oh! little knows the sturdy hind, who stands | |
Gazing, with looks where envy and contempt | |
Are often strangely mingled, on the car | |
Where prosperous Fortune sits; what secret care | |
Or sick satiety is often hid, | |
Beneath the splendid outside: He knows not | |
How frequently the child of Luxury | |
Enjoying nothing, flies from place to place | |
In chase of pleasure that eludes his grasp; | |
And that content is e'en less found by him, | |
Than by the labourer, whose pick-axe smooths | |
The road before his chariot; and who doffs | |
What was an hat; and as the train pass on, | |
Thinks how one day's expenditure, like this, | |
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Would cheer him for long months, when to his toil | |
The frozen earth closes her marble breast. |
Ah! who is happy?␣␣Happiness! a word | |
That like false fire, from marsh effluvia born, | |
Misleads the wanderer, destin'd to contend | |
In the world's wilderness, with want or woe— | |
Yet they are happy, who have never ask'd | |
What good or evil means.␣␣The boy | |
That on the river's margin gaily plays, | |
Has heard that Death is there—He knows not Death, | |
And therefore fears it not; and venturing in | |
He gains a bullrush, or a minnow—then, | |
At certain peril, for a worthless prize, | |
A crow's, or raven's nest, he climbs the boll, | |
― 19 ― |
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Of some tall pine; and of his prowess proud, | |
Is for a moment happy.␣␣Are your cares, | |
Ye who despise him, never worse applied? | |
The village girl is happy, who sets forth | |
To distant fair, gay in her Sunday suit, | |
With cherry colour'd knots, and flourish'd shawl, | |
And bonnet newly purchas'd.␣␣So is he | |
Her little brother, who his mimic drum | |
Beats, till he drowns her rural lovers' oaths | |
Of constant faith, and still increasing love; | |
Ah! yet a while, and half those oaths believ'd, | |
Her happiness is vanish'd; and the boy | |
While yet a stripling, finds the sound he lov'd | |
Has led him on, till he has given up | |
His freedom, and his happiness together. |
I once was happy, when while yet a child, | |
I learn'd to love these upland solitudes, | |
And, when elastic as the mountain air, | |
To my light spirit, care was yet unknown | |
And evil unforeseen:—Early it came, | |
And childhood scarcely passed, I was condemned, | |
A guiltless exile, silently to sigh, | |
While Memory, with faithful pencil, drew | |
The contrast; and regretting, I compar'd | |
With the polluted smoky atmosphere | |
And dark and stifling streets, the southern hills | |
That to the setting Sun, their graceful heads | |
Rearing, o'erlook the frith, where Vecta breaks | |
With her white rocks, the strong impetuous tide, | |
When western winds the vast Atlantic urge | |
To thunder on the coast—Haunts of my youth! | |
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Scenes of fond day dreams, I behold ye yet! | |
Where 'twas so pleasant by thy northern slopes | |
To climb the winding sheep-path, aided oft | |
By scatter'd thorns: whose spiny branches bore | |
Small woolly tufts, spoils of the vagrant lamb | |
There seeking shelter from the noon-day sun; | |
And pleasant, seated on the short soft turf, | |
To look beneath upon the hollow way | |
While heavily upward mov'd the labouring wain, | |
And stalking slowly by, the sturdy hind | |
To ease his panting team, stopp'd with a stone | |
The grating wheel. |
Advancing higher still | |
The prospect widens, and the village church | |
But little, o'er the lowly roofs around | |
― 22 ― |
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Rears its gray belfry, and its simple vane; | |
Those lowly roofs of thatch are half conceal'd | |
By the rude arms of trees, lovely in spring, | |
When on each bough, the rosy-tinctur'd bloom | |
Sits thick, and promises autumnal plenty. | |
For even those orchards round the Norman farms, | |
Which, as their owners mark the promis'd fruit, | |
Console them for the vineyards of the south, | |
Surpass not these. |
Where woods of ash, and beech, | |
And partial copses, fringe the green hill foot, | |
The upland shepherd rears his modest home, | |
There wanders by, a little nameless stream | |
That from the hill wells forth, bright now and clear, | |
Or after rain with chalky mixture gray, | |
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But still refreshing in its shallow course, | |
The cottage garden; most for use design'd, | |
Yet not of beauty destitute.␣␣The vine | |
Mantles the little casement; yet the briar | |
Drops fragrant dew among the July flowers; | |
And pansies rayed, and freak'd and mottled pinks | |
Grow among balm, and rosemary and rue: | |
There honeysuckles flaunt, and roses blow | |
Almost uncultured: Some with dark green leaves | |
Contrast their flowers of pure unsullied white; | |
Others, like velvet robes of regal state | |
Of richest crimson, while in thorny moss | |
Enshrined and cradled, the most lovely, wear | |
The hues of youthful beauty's glowing cheek.— | |
With fond regret I recollect e'en now | |
In Spring and Summer, what delight I felt | |
― 24 ― |
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Among these cottage gardens, and how much | |
Such artless nosegays, knotted with a rush | |
By village housewife or her ruddy maid, | |
Were welcome to me; soon and simply pleas'd. |
An early worshipper at Nature's shrine; | |
I loved her rudest scenes—warrens, and heaths, | |
And yellow commons, and birch-shaded hollows, | |
And hedge rows, bordering unfrequented lanes | |
Bowered with wild roses, and the clasping woodbine | |
Where purple tassels of the tangling vetch | |
With bittersweet, and bryony inweave, | |
And the dew fills the silver bindweed's cups— | |
I loved to trace the brooks whose humid banks | |
Nourish the harebell, and the freckled pagil; | |
And stroll among o'ershadowing woods of beech, | |
― 25 ― |
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Lending in Summer, from the heats of noon | |
A whispering shade; while haply there reclines | |
Some pensive lover of uncultur'd flowers, | |
Who, from the tumps with bright green mosses clad, | |
Plucks the wood sorrel, with its light thin leaves, | |
Heart-shaped, and triply folded; and its root | |
Creeping like beaded coral; or who there | |
Gathers, the copse's pride, anémones, | |
With rays like golden studs on ivory laid | |
Most delicate: but touch'd with purple clouds, | |
Fit crown for April's fair but changeful brow. |
Ah! hills so early loved! in fancy still | |
I breathe your pure keen air; and still behold | |
Those widely spreading views, mocking alike | |
The Poet and the Painter's utmost art. | |
― 26 ― |
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And still, observing objects more minute, | |
Wondering remark the strange and foreign forms | |
Of sea-shells; with the pale calcareous soil | |
Mingled, and seeming of resembling substance. | |
Tho' surely the blue Ocean (from the heights | |
Where the downs westward trend, but dimly seen) | |
Here never roll'd its surge.␣␣Does Nature then | |
Mimic, in wanton mood, fantastic shapes | |
Of bivalves, and inwreathed volutes, that cling | |
To the dark sea-rock of the wat'ry world? | |
Or did this range of chalky mountains, once | |
Form a vast bason, where the Ocean waves | |
Swell'd fathomless? What time these fossil shells, | |
Buoy'd on their native element, were thrown | |
Among the imbedding calx: when the huge hill | |
Its giant bulk heaved, and in strange ferment | |
― 27 ― |
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Grew up a guardian barrier, 'twixt the sea | |
And the green level of the sylvan weald. |
Ah! very vain is Science' proudest boast, | |
And but a little light its flame yet lends | |
To its most ardent votaries; since from whence | |
These fossil forms are seen, is but conjecture, | |
Food for vague theories, or vain dispute, | |
While to his daily task the peasant goes, | |
Unheeding such inquiry; with no care | |
But that the kindly change of sun and shower, | |
Fit for his toil the earth he cultivates. | |
As little recks the herdsman of the hill, | |
Who on some turfy knoll, idly reclined, | |
Watches his wether flock; that deep beneath | |
Rest the remains of men, of whom is left | |
― 28 ― |
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No traces in the records of mankind, | |
Save what these half obliterated mounds | |
And half fill'd trenches doubtfully impart | |
To some lone antiquary; who on times remote, | |
Since which two thousand years have roll'd away, | |
Loves to contemplate.␣␣He perhaps may trace, | |
Or fancy he can trace, the oblong square | |
Where the mail'd legions, under Claudius, rear'd, | |
The rampire, or excavated fossé delved; | |
What time the huge unwieldy Elephant | |
Auxiliary reluctant, hither led, | |
From Afric's forest glooms and tawny sands, | |
First felt the Northern blast, and his vast frame | |
Sunk useless; whence in after ages found, | |
The wondering hinds, on those enormous bones | |
Gaz'd; and in giants dwelling on the hills | |
Believed and marvell'd— |
Hither, Ambition, come! | |
Come and behold the nothingness of all | |
For which you carry thro' the oppressed Earth, | |
War, and its train of horrors—see where tread | |
The innumerous hoofs of flocks above the works | |
By which the warrior sought to register | |
His glory, and immortalize his name— | |
The pirate Dane, who from his circular camp | |
Bore in destructive robbery, fire and sword | |
Down thro' the vale, sleeps unremember'd here; | |
And here, beneath the green sward, rests alike | |
The savage native, who his acorn meal | |
Shar'd with the herds, that ranged the pathless woods; | |
And the centurion, who on these wide hills | |
Encamping, planted the Imperial Eagle. | |
All, with the lapse of Time, have passed away, | |
― 30 ― |
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Even as the clouds, with dark and dragon shapes, | |
Or like vast promontories crown'd with towers, | |
Cast their broad shadows on the downs: then sail | |
Far to the northward, and their transient gloom | |
Is soon forgotten. |
But from thoughts like these, | |
By human crimes suggested, let us turn | |
To where a more attractive study courts | |
The wanderer of the hills; while shepherd girls | |
Will from among the fescue bring him flowers, | |
Of wonderous mockery; some resembling bees | |
In velvet vest, intent on their sweet toil, | |
While others mimic flies, that lightly sport | |
In the green shade, or float along the pool, | |
But here seem perch'd upon the slender stalk, | |
― 31 ― |
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And gathering honey dew.␣␣While in the breeze | |
That wafts the thistle's plumed seed along, | |
Blue bells wave tremulous. ␣␣The mountain thyme | |
Purples the hassock of the heaving mole, | |
And the short turf is gay with tormentil, | |
And bird's foot trefoil, and the lesser tribes | |
Of hawkweed; spangling it with fringed stars.— | |
Near where a richer tract of cultur'd land | |
Slopes to the south; and burnished by the sun, | |
Bend in the gale of August, floods of corn; | |
The guardian of the flock, with watchful care, | |
Repels by voice and dog the encroaching sheep— | |
While his boy visits every wired trap | |
That scars the turf; and from the pit-falls takes | |
The timid migrants, who from distant wilds, | |
Warrens, and stone quarries, are destined thus | |
― 32 ― |
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To lose their short existence.␣␣But unsought | |
By Luxury yet, the Shepherd still protects | |
The social bird, who from his native haunts | |
Of willowy current, or the rushy pool, | |
Follows the fleecy croud, and flirts and skims, | |
In fellowship among them. |
Where the knoll | |
More elevated takes the changeful winds, | |
The windmill rears its vanes; and thitherward | |
With his white load, the master travelling, | |
Scares the rooks rising slow on whispering wings, | |
While o'er his head, before the summer sun | |
Lights up the blue expanse, heard more than seen, | |
The lark sings matins; and above the clouds | |
Floating, embathes his spotted breast in dew. | |
― 33 ― |
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Beneath the shadow of a gnarled thorn, | |
Bent by the sea blast, from a seat of turf | |
With fairy nosegays strewn, how wide the view! | |
Till in the distant north it melts away, | |
And mingles indiscriminate with clouds: | |
But if the eye could reach so far, the mart | |
Of England's capital, its domes and spires | |
Might be perceived—Yet hence the distant range | |
Of Kentish hills, appear in purple haze; | |
And nearer, undulate the wooded heights, | |
And airy summits, that above the mole | |
Rise in green beauty; and the beacon'd ridge | |
Of Black-down shagg'd with heath, and swelling rude | |
Like a dark island from the vale; its brow | |
Catching the last rays of the evening sun | |
That gleam between the nearer park's old oaks, | |
― 34 ― |
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Then lighten up the river, and make prominent | |
The portal, and the ruin'd battlements | |
Of that dismantled fortress; rais'd what time | |
␣␣The Conqueror's successors fiercely fought, | |
Tearing with civil feuds the desolate land. | |
But now a tiller of the soil dwells there, | |
And of the turret's loop'd and rafter'd halls | |
Has made an humbler homestead—Where he sees, | |
Instead of armed foemen, herds that graze | |
Along his yellow meadows; or his flocks | |
At evening from the upland driv'n to fold— |
In such a castellated mansion once | |
A stranger chose his home; and where hard by | |
In rude disorder fallen, and hid with brushwood | |
Lay fragments gray of towers and buttresses, | |
― 35 ― |
|
Among the ruins, often he would muse— | |
His rustic meal soon ended, he was wont | |
To wander forth, listening the evening sounds | |
Of rushing milldam, or the distant team, | |
Or night-jar, chasing fern-flies: the tir'd hind | |
Pass'd him at nightfall, wondering he should sit | |
On the hill top so late: they from the coast | |
Who sought bye paths with their clandestine load, | |
Saw with suspicious doubt, the lonely man | |
Cross on their way: but village maidens thought | |
His senses injur'd; and with pity say | |
That he, poor youth! must have been cross'd in love— | |
For often, stretch'd upon the mountain turf | |
With folded arms, and eyes intently fix'd | |
Where ancient elms and firs obscured a grange, | |
Some little space within the vale below, | |
― 36 ― |
|
They heard him, as complaining of his fate, | |
And to the murmuring wind, of cold neglect | |
And baffled hope he told.—The peasant girls | |
These plaintive sounds remember, and even now | |
Among them may be heard the stranger's songs. |
Were I a Shepherd on the hill | |
And ever as the mists withdrew | |
Could see the willows of the rill | |
Shading the footway to the mill | |
Where once I walk'd with you— |
And as away Night's shadows sail, | |
And sounds of birds and brooks arise, | |
Believe, that from the woody vale | |
I hear your voice upon the gale | |
In soothing melodies; |
And viewing from the Alpine height, | |
The prospect dress'd in hues of air, | |
Could say, while transient colours bright | |
Touch'd the fair scene with dewy light, | |
'Tis, that her eyes are there! |
I think, I could endure my lot | |
And linger on a few short years, | |
And then, by all but you forgot, | |
Sleep, where the turf that clothes the spot | |
May claim some pitying tears. |
For 'tis not easy to forget | |
One, who thro' life has lov'd you still, | |
And you, however late, might yet | |
With sighs to Memory giv'n, regret | |
The Shepherd of the Hill. |
Yet otherwhile it seem'd as if young Hope | |
Her flattering pencil gave to Fancy's hand, | |
And in his wanderings, rear'd to sooth his soul | |
Ideal bowers of pleasure—Then, of Solitude | |
And of his hermit life, still more enamour'd, | |
His home was in the forest; and wild fruits | |
― 39 ― |
|
And bread sustain'd him.␣␣There in early spring | |
The Barkmen found him, e'er the sun arose; | |
There at their daily toil, the Wedgecutters | |
Beheld him thro' the distant thicket move. | |
The shaggy dog following the truffle hunter, | |
Bark'd at the loiterer; and perchance at night | |
Belated villagers from fair or wake, | |
While the fresh night-wind let the moonbeams in | |
Between the swaying boughs, just saw him pass, | |
And then in silence, gliding like a ghost | |
He vanish'd! Lost among the deepening gloom.— | |
But near one ancient tree, whose wreathed roots | |
Form'd a rude couch, love-songs and scatter'd rhymes, | |
Unfinish'd sentences, or half erased, | |
And rhapsodies like this, were sometimes found— |
Let us to woodland wilds repair | |
While yet the glittering night-dews seem | |
To wait the freshly-breathing air, | |
Precursive of the morning beam, | |
That rising with advancing day, | |
Scatters the silver drops away. |
An elm, uprooted by the storm, | |
The trunk with mosses gray and green, | |
Shall make for us a rustic form, | |
Where lighter grows the forest scene; | |
And far among the bowery shades, | |
Are ferny lawns and grassy glades. |
Retiring May to lovely June | |
Her latest garland now resigns; | |
The banks with cuckoo-flowers are strewn, | |
The woodwalks blue with columbines, | |
And with its reeds, the wandering stream | |
Reflects the flag-flower's golden gleam. |
There, feathering down the turf to meet, | |
Their shadowy arms the beeches spread, | |
While high above our sylvan seat, | |
Lifts the light ash its airy head; | |
And later leaved, the oaks between | |
Extend their bows of vernal green. |
The slender birch its paper rind | |
Seems offering to divided love, | |
And shuddering even without a wind | |
Aspins, their paler foliage move, | |
As if some spirit of the air | |
Breath'd a low sigh in passing there. |
The Squirrel in his frolic mood, | |
Will fearless bound among the boughs; | |
Yaffils laugh loudly thro' the wood, | |
And murmuring ring-doves tell their vows; | |
While we, as sweetest woodscents rise, | |
Listen to woodland melodies. |
And I'll contrive a sylvan room | |
Against the time of summer heat, | |
Where leaves, inwoven in Nature's loom, | |
Shall canopy our green retreat; | |
And gales that "close the eye of day" | |
Shall linger, e'er they die away. |
And when a sear and sallow hue | |
From early frost the bower receives, | |
I'll dress the sand rock cave for you, | |
And strew the floor with heath and leaves, | |
That you, against the autumnal air | |
May find securer shelter there. |
The Nightingale will then have ceas'd | |
To sing her moonlight serenade; | |
But the gay bird with blushing breast, | |
And Woodlarks still will haunt the shade, | |
And by the borders of the spring | |
Reed-wrens will yet be carolling. |
The forest hermit's lonely cave | |
None but such soothing sounds shall reach, | |
Or hardly heard, the distant wave | |
Slow breaking on the stony beach; | |
Or winds, that now sigh soft and low, | |
Now make wild music as they blow. |
And then, before the chilling North | |
The tawny foliage falling light, | |
Seems, as it flits along the earth, | |
The footfall of the busy Sprite, | |
Who wrapt in pale autumnal gloom, | |
Calls up the mist-born Mushroom. |
Oh! could I hear your soft voice there, | |
And see you in the forest green | |
All beauteous as you are, more fair | |
You'ld look, amid the sylvan scene, | |
And in a wood-girl's simple guise, | |
Be still more lovely in mine eyes. |
Ye phantoms of unreal delight, | |
Visions of fond delirium born! | |
Rise not on my deluded sight, | |
Then leave me drooping and forlorn | |
To know, such bliss can never be, | |
Unless␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣␣loved like me. |
The visionary, nursing dreams like these, | |
Is not indeed unhappy.␣␣Summer woods | |
Wave over him, and whisper as they wave, | |
Some future blessings he may yet enjoy. | |
And as above him sail the silver clouds, | |
He follows them in thought to distant climes, | |
Where, far from the cold policy of this, | |
― 47 ― |
|
Dividing him from her he fondly loves, | |
He, in some island of the southern sea, | |
May haply build his cane-constructed bower | |
Beneath the bread-fruit, or aspiring palm, | |
With long green foliage rippling in the gale. | |
Oh! let him cherish his ideal bliss— | |
For what is life, when Hope has ceas'd to strew | |
Her fragile flowers along its thorny way? | |
And sad and gloomy are his days, who lives | |
Of Hope abandon'd! |
Just beneath the rock | |
Where Beachy overpeers the channel wave, | |
Within a cavern mined by wintry tides | |
Dwelt one, who long disgusted with the world | |
And all its ways, appear'd to suffer life | |
― 48 ― |
|
Rather than live; the soul-reviving gale, | |
Fanning the bean-field, or the thymy heath, | |
Had not for many summers breathed on him; | |
And nothing mark'd to him the season's change, | |
Save that more gently rose the placid sea, | |
And that the birds which winter on the coast | |
Gave place to other migrants; save that the fog, | |
Hovering no more above the beetling cliffs | |
Betray'd not then the little careless sheep | |
On the brink grazing, while their headlong fall | |
Near the lone Hermit's flint-surrounded home, | |
Claim'd unavailing pity; for his heart | |
Was feelingly alive to all that breath'd; | |
And outraged as he was, in sanguine youth, | |
By human crimes, he still acutely felt | |
For human misery. |
Wandering on the beach, | |
He learn'd to augur from the clouds of heaven, | |
And from the changing colours of the sea, | |
And sullen murmurs of the hollow cliffs, | |
Or the dark porpoises, that near the shore | |
Gambol'd and sported on the level brine | |
When tempests were approaching: then at night | |
He listen'd to the wind; and as it drove | |
The billows with o'erwhelming vehemence | |
He, starting from his rugged couch, went forth | |
And hazarding a life, too valueless, | |
He waded thro' the waves, with plank or pole | |
Towards where the mariner in conflict dread | |
Was buffeting for life the roaring surge; | |
And now just seen, now lost in foaming gulphs, | |
The dismal gleaming of the clouded moon | |
― 50 ― |
|
Shew'd the dire peril. ␣␣Often he had snatch'd | |
From the wild billows, some unhappy man | |
Who liv'd to bless the hermit of the rocks. | |
But if his generous cares were all in vain, | |
And with slow swell the tide of morning bore | |
Some blue swol'n cor'se to land; the pale recluse | |
Dug in the chalk a sepulchre—above | |
Where the dank sea-wrack mark'd the utmost tide, | |
And with his prayers perform'd the obsequies | |
For the poor helpless stranger. |
One dark night | |
The equinoctial wind blew south by west, | |
Fierce on the shore; —the bellowing cliffs were shook | |
Even to their stony base, and fragments fell | |
Flashing and thundering on the angry flood. | |
― 51 ― |
|
At day-break, anxious for the lonely man, | |
His cave the mountain shepherds visited, | |
Tho' sand and banks of weeds had choak'd their way— | |
He was not in it; but his drowned cor'se | |
By the waves wafted, near his former home | |
Receiv'd the rites of burial.␣␣Those who read | |
Chisel'd within the rock, these mournful lines, | |
Memorials of his sufferings, did not grieve, | |
That dying in the cause of charity | |
His spirit, from its earthly bondage freed, | |
Had to some better region fled for ever. |
THE TRUANT DOVE,
FROM PILPAY.
A FABLE.
A MOUNTAIN stream, its channel deep | |
Beneath a rock's rough base had torn; | |
The cliff, like a vast castle wall, was steep | |
By fretting rains in many a crevice worn; | |
But the fern wav'd there, and the mosses crept, | |
And o'er the summit, where the wind | |
Peel'd from their stems the silver rind, | |
Depending birches wept—— | |
There, tufts of broom a footing used to find, | |
― 53 ― |
|
And heath and straggling grass to grow, | |
And half-way down from roots enwreathing, broke | |
The branches of a scathed oak, | |
And seem'd to guard the cave below, | |
Where each revolving year, | |
Their twins, two faithful doves were wont to rear; | |
Choice never join'd a fonder pair; | |
To each their simple home was dear, | |
No discord ever enter'd there; | |
But there the soft affections dwell'd, | |
And three returning springs beheld | |
Secure within their fortress high | |
The little happy family. | |
"Toujours perdrix, messieurs, ne valent rien"— | |
So did a Gallic monarch once harangue, | |
And evil was the day whereon our bird | |
― 54 ― |
|
This saying heard, | |
From certain new acquaintance he had found, | |
Who at their perfect ease, | |
Amid a field of peas | |
Boasted to him, that all the country round, | |
The wheat, and oats, and barley, rye and tares, | |
Quite to the neighbouring sea, were theirs; | |
And theirs the oak, and beech-woods, far and near, | |
For their right noble owner was a peer, | |
And they themselves, luxuriantly were stored | |
In a great dove-cote—to amuse my lord! | |
"Toujours perdrix ne valent rien."␣␣That's strange! | |
When people once are happy, wherefore change? | |
So thought our stock-dove, but communication, | |
With birds in his new friend's exalted station, | |
Whose means of information, | |
― 55 ― |
|
And knowledge of all sorts, must be so ample; | |
Who saw great folks, and follow'd their example, | |
Made on the dweller of the cave, impression; | |
And soon, whatever was his best possession, | |
His sanctuary within the rock's deep breast, | |
His soft-eyed partner, and her nest, | |
He thought of with indifference, then with loathing; | |
So much insipid love was good for nothing.— | |
But sometimes tenderness return'd; his dame | |
So long belov'd, so mild, so free from blame, | |
How should he tell her, he had learn'd to cavil | |
At happiness itself, and longed to travel? | |
His heart still smote him, so much wrong to do her, | |
He knew not how to break the matter to her. | |
But love, tho' blind himself, makes some discerning; | |
His frequent absence, and his late returning, | |
― 56 ― |
|
With ruffled plumage, and with alter'd eyes, | |
His careless short replies, | |
And to their couplets, coldness or neglect | |
Had made his gentle wife suspect, | |
All was not right; but she forbore to teaze him, | |
Which would but give him an excuse to rove: | |
She therefore tried by every art to please him, | |
Endur'd his peevish starts with patient love, | |
And when (like other husbands from a tavern) | |
Of his new notions full, he sought his cavern | |
She with dissembled cheerfulness, "beguiled | |
"The thing she was," and gaily coo-ed and smiled. | |
'Tis not in this most motley sphere uncommon, | |
For man, (and so of course more feeble woman) | |
Most strongly to suspect, what they're pursuing | |
Will lead them to inevitable ruin, | |
― 57 ― |
|
Yet rush with open eyes to their undoing; | |
Thus felt the dove; but in the cant of fashion | |
He talk'd of fate, and of predestination, | |
And in a grave oration, | |
He to his much affrighted mate related, | |
How he, yet slumbering in the egg, was fated, | |
To gather knowledge, to instruct his kind, | |
By observation elevate his mind, | |
And give new impulse to Columbian life; | |
"If it be so," exclaim'd his hapless wife, | |
"It is my fate, to pass my days in pain, | |
"To mourn your love estrang'd, and mourn in vain; | |
"Here in our once dear hut, to wake and weep, | |
"When thy unkindness shall have 'murder'd sleep;' | |
"And never that dear hut shall I prepare, | |
"And wait with fondness your arrival there, | |
― 58 ― |
|
"While me, and mine forgetting, you will go | |
"To some new love."␣␣"Why, no, I tell you no,— | |
"What shall I say such foolish fears to cure? | |
"I only mean to make a little tour, | |
"Just—just to see the world around me; then | |
"With new delight, I shall come home again; | |
"Such tours are quite the rage—at my return | |
"I shall have much to tell, and you to learn; | |
"Of fashions—some becoming, some grotesque | |
"Of change of empires, and ideas novel; | |
"Of buildings, Grecian, Gothic, Arabesque, | |
"And scenery sublime and picturesque; | |
"And all these things with pleasure we'll discuss—" | |
"Ah, me! and what are all these things to us?" | |
"So then, you'd have a bird of genius grovel, | |
"And never see beyond a farmer's hovel? | |
― 59 ― |
|
"Even the sand-martin, that inferior creature, | |
"Goes once a year abroad."␣␣"It is his nature, | |
"But yours how different once!" and then she sigh'd, | |
"There was a time, Ah! would that I had died, | |
"E'er you so chang'd! when you'd have perish'd rather | |
"Than this poor breast should heave a single feather | |
"With grief and care.␣␣ And all this cant of fashion | |
"Would but have rais'd your anger, or compassion,— | |
"O my dear love! You sought not then to range, | |
"But on my changeful neck as fell the light, | |
"You sweetly said, you wish'd no other change | |
"Than that soft neck could shew; to berries bright | |
"Of mountain ash, you fondly could compare | |
"My scarlet feet and bill; my shape and air, | |
"Ah! faithless flatterer, did you not declare | |
"The soul of grace and beauty center'd there? | |
― 60 ― |
|
"My eyes you said, were opals, brightly pink, | |
"Enchas'd in onyx; and you seem'd to think, | |
"Each charm might then the coldest heart enthrall: | |
"Those charms were mine.␣␣ Alas! I gave you all— | |
"Your farthest wanderings then were but to fetch | |
"The pea, the tare, the beechmast, and the vetch, | |
"For my repast; within my rocky bower, | |
"With spleenwort shaded, and the blue-bell's flower, | |
"For prospects then you never wish'd to roam, | |
"But the best scenery was our happy home; | |
"And when, beneath my breast, then fair and young, | |
"Our first dear pair, our earliest nestlings sprung, | |
"And weakly, indistinctly, tried to coo— | |
"Were not those moments picturesque to you?" | |
"Yes, faith, my dear; and all you say is true." | |
― 61 ― |
|
"Oh! hear me then; if thus we have been blest, | |
"If on these wings it was your joy to rest, | |
"Love must from habit still new strength be gaining—" | |
"From habit? 'tis of that, child, I'm complaining | |
"This everlasting fondness will not be | |
"For birds of flesh and blood. ␣␣We sha'nt agree, | |
"So why dispute? now prithee don't torment me; | |
"I shall not long be gone; let that content ye: | |
"Pshaw! what a fuss! Come, no more sighs and groans, | |
"Keep up your spirits; mind your little ones; | |
"My journey won't be far—my honour's pledged— | |
"I shall be back again before they're fledged; | |
"Give me a kiss; and now my dear, adieu!" | |
So light of heart and plumes, away he flew; | |
And, as above the sheltering rock he springs, | |
She listen'd to the echo of his wings; | |
― 62 ― |
|
Those well-known sounds, so soothing heretofore, | |
Which her heart whisper'd she should hear no more. | |
Then to her cold and widow'd bed she crept, | |
Clasp'd her half-orphan'd young, and wept! | |
Her recreant mate, by other views attracted, | |
A very different part enacted; | |
He sought the dove-cote, and was greeted there | |
With all that's tonish, elegant, and rare, | |
Among the pigeon tribes; and there the rover | |
Lived quite in clover! | |
His jolly comrades now, were blades of spirit; | |
Their nymphs possess'd most fascinating merit; | |
Nor fail'd our hero of the rock to prove, | |
He thought not of inviolable love | |
To his poor spouse at home.␣␣He bow'd and sigh'd, | |
Now to a fantail's, now a cropper's bride; | |
― 63 ― |
|
Then cow'ring low to a majestic powter, | |
Declared he should not suffer life without her; | |
And then with upturn'd eyes, in phrase still humbler, | |
Implor'd the pity of an almond tumbler; | |
Next, to a beauteous carrier's feet he'd run, | |
And lived a week, the captive of a nun: | |
Thus far in measureless content he revels, | |
And blest the hour when he began his travels. | |
Yet some things soon occurr'd not quite so pleasant; | |
He had observ'd that an unfeeling peasant, | |
It silence mounting on a ladder high, | |
Seiz'd certain pigeons just as they could fly, | |
Who never figur'd more, but in a pie; | |
That was but aukward; then, his lordship's son | |
Heard from the groom, that 'twould be famous fun | |
To try on others his unpractis'd gun; | |
― 64 ― |
|
Their fall, the rattling shot, his nerves perplex'd; | |
He thought perhaps it might be his turn next. | |
It has been seen ere now, that, much elated, | |
To be by some great man caress'd and fêted, | |
A youth of humble birth, and mind industrious, | |
Foregoes in evil hour his independance; | |
And, charm'd to wait upon his friend illustrious, | |
Gives up his time to flattery and attendance. | |
His patron, smiling at his folly, lets him— | |
Some newer whim succeeds, and he forgets him. | |
So fared our bird; his new friend's vacant stare, | |
Told him he scarce remember'd he was there; | |
And, when he talk'd of living more securely, | |
This very dear friend, yawning, answered, "Surely! | |
"You are quite right to do what's most expedient, | |
"So, au revoir!—Good bye! Your most obedient." | |
― 65 ― |
|
Allies in prosperous fortune thus he prov'd, | |
And left them, unregretting, unbelov'd; | |
Yet much his self-love suffer'd by the shock, | |
And now, his quiet cabin in the rock, | |
The faithful partner of his every care, | |
And all the blessings he abandon'd there, | |
Rush'd on his sickening heart; he felt it yearn, | |
But pride and shame prevented his return; | |
So wandering farther—at the close of day | |
To the high woods he pensive wing'd his way; | |
But new distress at every turn he found— | |
Struck by an hawk, and stunn'd upon the ground, | |
He once by miracle escaped; then fled | |
From a wild cat, and hid his trembling head | |
Beneath a dock; recovering, on the wind | |
He rose once more, and left his fears behind; | |
― 66 ― |
|
And, as above the clouds he soar'd, the light | |
Fell on an inland rock; the radiance bright | |
Shew'd him his long deserted place of rest, | |
And thitherward he flew; his throbbing breast | |
Dwelt on his mate, so gentle, and so wrong'd, | |
And on his memory throng'd | |
The happiness he once at home had known; | |
Then to forgive him earnest to engage her, | |
And for his errors eager to atone, | |
Onward he went; but ah! not yet had flown | |
Fate's sharpest arrow: to decide a wager, | |
Two sportsmen shot at our deserter; down | |
The wind swift wheeling, struggling, still he fell, | |
Close to the margin of the stream that flow'd | |
Beneath the foot of his regretted cell, | |
And the fresh grass was spotted with his blood; | |
― 67 ― |
|
To his dear home he turn'd his languid view, | |
Deplor'd his folly, while he look'd his last, | |
And sigh'd a long adieu! | |
Thither to sip the brook, his nestlings, led | |
By their still pensive mother, came; | |
He saw; and murmuring forth her dear lov'd name, | |
Implor'd her pity, and with shortening breath, | |
Besought her to forgive him ere his death.— | |
And now, how hard in metre to relate | |
The tears and tender pity of his mate! | |
Or with what generous zeal, his faithful moitie | |
Taught her now feather'd young, with duteous piety, | |
To aid her, on their mutual wings to bear, | |
With stork-like care, | |
Their suffering parent to the rock above; | |
There, by the best physician, Love, | |
― 68 ― |
|
His wounds were heal'd.—His wanderings at an end, | |
And sober'd quite, the husband, and the friend, | |
In proof of reformation and contrition, | |
Gave to his race this prudent admonition; | |
Advice, which this, our fabling muse, presumes | |
May benefit the biped without plumes: | |
"If of domestic peace you are possess'd, | |
"Learn to believe yourself supremely bless'd; | |
"And gratefully enjoying your condition, | |
"Frisk not about, on whims and fancies strange, | |
"For ten to one, you for the worse will change: | |
"And 'tis most wise, to check all vain ambition— | |
"By such aspiring pride the angels fell; | |
"So love your wife, and know when you are well." |
THE LARK'S NEST.
A FABLE FROM ESOP.
"TRUST only to thyself;" the maxim's sound; | |
For, tho' life's choicest blessing be a friend, | |
Friends do not very much abound; | |
Or, where they happen to be found, | |
And greatly thou on friendship shouldst depend, | |
Thou'lt find it will not bear | |
Much wear and tear; | |
Nay! that even kindred, cousin, uncle, brother, | |
Has each perhaps to mind his own affair; | |
Attend to thine then; lean not on another. | |
― 70 ― |
|
Esop assures us that the maxim's wise; | |
And by a tale illustrates his advice: |
When April's bright and fickle beams | |
Saw every feather'd pair | |
In the green woodlands, or by willowy streams, | |
Busied in matrimonial schemes; | |
A Lark, amid the dewy air, | |
Woo'd, and soon won a favourite fair; | |
And, in a spot by springing rye protected, | |
Her labour sometimes shared; | |
While she, with bents, and wither'd grass collected, | |
Their humble domicile prepared; | |
Then, by her duty fix'd, the tender mate | |
Unwearied prest | |
― 71 ― |
|
Their future progeny beneath her breast; | |
And little slept, and little ate, | |
While her gay lover, with a careless heart, | |
As is the custom of his sex, | |
Full little recks | |
The coming family; but like a dart, | |
From his low homested, with the morning springs; | |
And far above the floating vapour, sings | |
At such an height, | |
That even the shepherd-lad upon the hill, | |
Hearing his matin note so shrill, | |
With shaded eyes against the lustre bright, | |
Scarce sees him twinkling in a flood of light. | |
But hunger, spite of all her perseverance, | |
Was one day urgent on his patient bride; | |
The truant made not his appearance, | |
― 72 ― |
|
That her fond care might be a while supplied,— | |
So, because hunger will not be denied, | |
She leaves her nest reluctant; and in haste | |
But just allows herself to taste, | |
A dew drop, and a few small seeds— | |
Ah! how her fluttering bosom bleeds, | |
When the dear cradle she had fondly rear'd | |
All desolate appear'd! | |
And ranging wide about the field she saw | |
A setter huge, whose unrelenting jaw | |
Had crush'd her half-existing young; | |
Long o'er her ruin'd hopes the mother hung, | |
And vainly mourn'd, | |
Ere from the clouds her wanderer return'd:— | |
Tears justly shed by beauty, who can stand them? | |
He heard her plaintive tale with unfeign'd sorrow, | |
― 73 ― |
|
But, as his motto was, "Nil desperandum," | |
Bade her hope better fortune for to-morrow; | |
Then from the fatal spot afar, they sought | |
A safer shelter, having bought | |
Experience, which is always rather dear; | |
And very near | |
A grassy headland, in a field of wheat, | |
They fix'd, with cautious care, their second seat— | |
But this took time; May was already past, | |
The white thorn had her silver blossoms cast, | |
And there the Nightingale, to lovely June, | |
Her last farewell had sung; | |
No longer reign'd July's intemperate noon, | |
And high in heaven the reaper's moon, | |
A little crescent hung, | |
Ere from their shells appear'd the plumeless young. | |
― 74 ― |
|
Oh! then with how much tender care, | |
The busy pair, | |
Watch'd and provided for the panting brood! | |
For then, the vagrant of the air, | |
Soar'd not to meet the morning star, | |
But, never from the nestlings far, | |
Explor'd each furrow, every sod for food; | |
While his more anxious partner tried | |
From hostile eyes, the helpless group to hide; | |
Attempting now, with labouring bill, to guide | |
The enwreathing bindweed round the nest; | |
Now joy'd to see the cornflower's azure crest | |
Above it waving, and the cockle grow, | |
Or poppies throw | |
Their scarlet curtains round; | |
While the more humble children of the ground, | |
― 75 ― |
|
Freak'd pansies, fumitory, pimpernel, | |
Circled with arras light, the secret cell:— | |
But who against all evils can provide? | |
Hid, and overshadow'd thus, and fortified, | |
By teasel, and the scabious' thready disk, | |
Corn-marygold, and thistles; too much risk | |
The little household still were doom'd to run, | |
For the same ardent sun, | |
Whose beams had drawn up many an idle flower, | |
To fence the lonely bower, | |
Had by his powerful heat, | |
Matured the wheat; | |
And chang'd of hue, it hung its heavy head, | |
While every rustling gale that blew along | |
From neighbouring uplands, brought the rustic song | |
Of harvest merriment: then full of dread, | |
― 76 ― |
|
Lest, not yet fully fledg'd, her race | |
The reaper's foot might crush, or reaper's dog might trace, | |
Or village child, too young to reap or bind, | |
Loitering around, her hidden treasure find; | |
The mother bird was bent | |
To move them, e'er the sickle came more near; | |
And therefore, when for food abroad she went, | |
(For now her mate again was on the ramble) | |
She bade her young report what they should hear: | |
So the next hour they cried, "They'll all assemble, | |
"The farmer's neighbours, with the dawn of light, | |
"Therefore, dear mother, let us move to night." | |
"Fear not, my loves," said she, "you need not tremble; | |
"Trust me, if only neighbours are in question, | |
"Eat what I bring, and spoil not your digestion | |
"Or sleep, for this." Next day away she flew, | |
― 77 ― |
|
And that no neighbour came was very true; | |
But her returning wings the Larklings knew, | |
And quivering round her, told, their landlord said, | |
"Why, John! the reaping must not be delay'd, | |
"By peep of day to-morrow we'll begin, | |
"Since now so many of our kin | |
"Have promis'd us their help to set about it." | |
"Still," quoth the bird, "I doubt it; | |
"The corn will stand to-morrow."␣␣So it prov'd; | |
The morning's dawn arriv'd—but never saw | |
Or uncle, cousin, brother, or brother-in-law; | |
And not a reap-hook mov'd! | |
Then to his son the angry farmer cried, | |
"Some folks are little known 'till they are tried; | |
"Who would have thought we had so few well-wishers! | |
"What! neither neighbour Dawes, nor cousin Fishers, | |
― 78 ― |
|
"Nor uncle Betts, nor even my brother Delves, | |
"Will lend an hand, to help us get the corn in? | |
"Well then, let you and me, to-morrow morning, | |
"E'en try what we can do with it ourselves." | |
"Nay," quoth the Lark, "'tis time then to be gone: | |
"What a man undertakes himself is done." | |
Certes, she was a bird of observation; | |
For very true it is, that none, | |
Whatever be his station, | |
Lord of a province, tenant of a mead, | |
Whether he fill a cottage, or a throne, | |
Or guard a flock, or guide a nation, | |
Is very likely to succeed, | |
Who manages affairs by deputation. |
THE SWALLOW.
THE gorse is yellow on the heath, | |
The banks with speedwell flowers are gay, | |
The oaks are budding; and beneath, | |
The hawthorn soon will bear the wreath, | |
The silver wreath of May. |
The welcome guest of settled Spring, | |
The Swallow too is come at last; | |
Just at sun-set, when thrushes sing, | |
I saw her dash with rapid wing, | |
And hail'd her as she pass'd. |
Come, summer visitant, attach | |
To my reed roof your nest of clay, | |
And let my ear your music catch | |
Low twittering underneath the thatch | |
At the gray dawn of day. |
As fables tell, an Indian Sage, | |
The Hindostani woods among, | |
Could in his desert hermitage, | |
As if 'twere mark'd in written page, | |
Translate the wild bird's song. |
I wish I did his power possess, | |
That I might learn, fleet bird, from thee, | |
What our vain systems only guess, | |
And know from what wide wilderness | |
You came across the sea. |
I would a little while restrain | |
Your rapid wing, that I might hear | |
Whether on clouds that bring the rain, | |
You sail'd above the western main, | |
The wind your charioteer. |
In Afric, does the sultry gale | |
Thro' spicy bower, and palmy grove, | |
Bear the repeated Cuckoo's tale? | |
Dwells there a time, the wandering Rail | |
Or the itinerant Dove? |
Were you in Asia? O relate, | |
If there your fabled sister's woes | |
She seem'd in sorrow to narrate; | |
Or sings she but to celebrate | |
Her nuptials with the rose? |
I would enquire how journeying long, | |
The vast and pathless ocean o'er, | |
You ply again those pinions strong, | |
And come to build anew among | |
The scenes you left before; |
But if, as colder breezes blow, | |
Prophetic of the waning year, | |
You hide, tho' none know when or how, | |
In the cliff's excavated brow, | |
And linger torpid here; |
Thus lost to life, what favouring dream | |
Bids you to happier hours awake; | |
And tells, that dancing in the beam, | |
The light gnat hovers o'er the stream, | |
The May-fly on the lake? |
Or if, by instinct taught to know | |
Approaching dearth of insect food; | |
To isles and willowy aits you go, | |
And crouding on the pliant bough, | |
Sink in the dimpling flood: |
How learn ye, while the cold waves boom | |
Your deep and ouzy couch above, | |
The time when flowers of promise bloom, | |
And call you from your transient tomb, | |
To light, and life, and love? |
Alas! how little can be known, | |
Her sacred veil where Nature draws; | |
Let baffled Science humbly own, | |
Her mysteries understood alone, | |
By Him who gives her laws. |
FLORA.
REMOTE from scenes, where the o'erwearied mind | |
Shrinks from the crimes and follies of mankind, | |
From hostile menace, and offensive boast, | |
Peace, and her train of home-born pleasures lost; | |
To fancy's reign, who would not gladly turn, | |
And lose awhile, the miseries they mourn | |
In sweet oblivion? Come then, Fancy! deign, | |
Queen of ideal pleasure, once again, | |
To lend thy magic pencil, and to bring | |
Such lovely forms, as in life's happier spring, | |
― 85 ― |
|
On the green margin of my native Wey, | |
Before mine infant eyes were wont to play, | |
And with that pencil, teach me to describe | |
The enchanting goddess of the flowery tribe, | |
Whose first prerogative it is to chase | |
The clouds that hang on languid beauty's face; | |
And, while advancing suns and tepid showers, | |
Lead on the laughing Spring's delicious hours, | |
Bid the wan maid the hues of health assume, | |
Charm with new grace, and blush with fresher bloom. |
The vision comes!—While slowly melt away, | |
Night's hovering shades before the eastern ray, | |
Ere yet declines the morning's humid star, | |
Fair Fancy brings her; in her leafy car | |
― 86 ― |
|
Flora descends, to dress the expecting earth, | |
Awake the germs, and call the buds to birth; | |
Bid each hybernacle its cell unfold, | |
And open silken leaves, and eyes of gold! |
Of forest foliage of the firmest shade | |
Enwove by magic hands, the car was made; | |
Oak, and the ample Plane, without entwined, | |
And Beech and Ash the verdant concave lin'd; | |
The Saxifrage, that snowy flowers emboss, | |
Supplied the seat; and of the mural moss | |
The velvet footstool rose, where lightly rest, | |
Her slender feet in Cypripedium drest. | |
The tufted rush, that bears a silken crown, | |
The floating feathers of the thistle's down, | |
― 87 ― |
|
In tender hues of rainbow lustre dyed, | |
The airy texture of her robe supplied, | |
And wild convolvuli, yet half unblown, | |
Form'd, with their wreathing buds, her simple zone, | |
Some wandering tresses of her radiant hair, | |
Luxuriant floated on the enamour'd air; | |
The rest were by the Scandix' points confin'd | |
And graced a shining knot, her head behind— | |
While, as a sceptre of supreme command, | |
She waved the Anthoxanthum in her hand. |
Around the goddess, as the flies that play, | |
In countless myriads in the western ray, | |
The sylphs innumerous throng; whose magic powers | |
Guard the soft buds, and nurse the infant flowers; | |
― 88 ― |
|
Round the sustaining stems weak tendrils bind, | |
And save the pollen from dispersing wind; | |
From suns too ardent, shade their transient hues, | |
And catch in odorous cups translucent dews. | |
The ruder tasks of others are, to chase | |
From vegetable life the insect race, | |
Break the polluting thread the spider weaves, | |
And brush the aphis from th' unfolding leaves. |
For conquest arm'd these pigmy warriors wield | |
The thorny lance, and spread the hollow shield | |
Of lichen tough; or bear, as silver bright, | |
Lunaria's pearly circlet, firm and light. | |
On the helm'd head the crimson foxglove glows, | |
Or Scutellaria guards the martial brows, | |
― 89 ― |
|
While the Leontodon its plumage rears, | |
And o'er the casque in waving grace appears; | |
With stern undaunted eye, one warlike chief | |
Grasps the tall club from Arum's blood-dropt leaf; | |
This, with the Burdock's hooks annoys his foes, | |
The purple thorn that borrows from the Rose. | |
In honeyed nectaries couched, some drive away | |
The forked insidious earwig from his prey; | |
Fearless the scaled libellula assail, | |
Dart their keen lances at the encroaching snail; | |
Arrest the winged ant, on pinions light, | |
And strike the headlong beetle in his flight. |
Nor less assiduous round their lovely queen, | |
The lighter forms of female fays are seen; | |
― 90 ― |
|
Rich was the purple vest Floscella wore, | |
Spun of the tufts the Tradescantia bore; | |
The Cistus' flowers minute her temple graced, | |
And threads of Yucca bound her slender waist. |
From the wild bee, whose wond'rous labour weaves, | |
In artful folds the rose's fragrant leaves, | |
Was borrow'd fair Petalla's light cymar; | |
And the Hypericum, with spangling star, | |
O'er her fair locks its bloom minute enwreath'd; | |
Then, while voluptuous odours round her breath'd, | |
Came Nectarynia; as the arrowy rays | |
Of lambent fire round pictur'd seraphs blaze, | |
So did the Passiflora's radii shed, | |
Cerulean glory o'er the sylphid's head, | |
― 91 ― |
|
While round her form, the pliant tendrils twined, | |
And clasp'd the scarf that floated on the wind. |
More grave the para-nymph Calyxa drest; | |
A brown transparent spatha formed her vest; | |
The silver scales that bound her raven hair, | |
Xeranthemum's unfading calyx bear; | |
And a light sash of spiral Ophrys press'd | |
Her filmy tunic, on her tender breast. |
But where shall images or words be found | |
To paint the fair ethereal forms, that round | |
The queen of flowers attended? and the while | |
Bask'd in her eyes and wanton'd in her smile. | |
― 92 ― |
|
Now towards the earth the gay procession bends, | |
Lo! from the buoyant air, the car descends; | |
Anticipating then the various year, | |
Flowers of all hues and every month appear, | |
From every swelling bulb its blossoms rise; | |
Here, blow the Hyacinths of loveliest dyes, | |
Breathing of heaven; and there, her royal brows | |
Begemmed with pearl, the Crown imperial shews; | |
Peeps the blue Gentian, from the soft'ning ground, | |
Jonquils and Violets, shed their odours round; | |
The Honeysuckle rears his scallop'd horn; | |
A snow of blossoms whiten on the thorn. | |
Here, like the fatal fruit to Paris given, | |
That spread fell feuds throughout the fabled heaven, | |
― 93 ― |
|
The yellow Rose her golden globe displays; | |
There lovelier still, among the spiny sprays | |
Her blushing rivals glow with brighter dyes, | |
Than paints the summer sun on western skies. | |
And the scarce tinged, and paler Rose unveil | |
Their modest beauties to the sighing gale. | |
Thro' the deep woodland's wild uncultur'd scene, | |
Spreads the soft influence of the floral queen; | |
See a fair pyramid the Chesnut rear, | |
Its crimson tassels on the Larch appear; | |
The Fir, dark native of the sullen North, | |
Owns her soft sway; and slowly springing forth | |
On the rough Oak are buds minute unfurl'd, | |
Whose giant produce may command the world! | |
Each forest thicket feels the balmy air, | |
And plants that love the shade are blowing there. | |
― 94 ― |
|
Rude rocks with Filices and Bryums smile, | |
And wastes are gay with Thyme and Chamomile. |
Ah! yet prolong the dear delicious dream, | |
And trace her power along the mountain stream. | |
See! from its rude and rocky source, o'erhung | |
With female fern, and glossy adder's-tongue | |
Slowly it wells, in pure and chrystal drops, | |
And steals soft-gliding, thro' the upland copse; | |
Then murmuring on, along the willowy sides, | |
The reed-bird whispers, and the Halcyon hides; | |
While among sallows pale, and birchen bowers, | |
Embarks in Fancy's eye the queen of flowers. |
O'er her light skiff, of woven bull-rush made, | |
The Water lily lends a polish'd shade; | |
― 95 ― |
|
While Galium there, of pale and silver hue, | |
And Epilobiums on the banks that grew, | |
Form her soft couch; and as the Sylphs divide, | |
With pliant arms, the still increasing tide, | |
A thousand leaves along the stream unfold; | |
Amid its waving swords, in flaming gold | |
The Iris towers; and here the Arrowhead | |
And water Crowfoot, more profusely spread | |
Spangle the quiet current; higher there, | |
As conscious of her claims, in beauty rare, | |
Her rosy umbels rears the flow'ring Rush, | |
While with reflected charms the waters blush. | |
The naiad now, the year's fair goddess leads, | |
Through richer pastures and more level meads | |
Down to the sea; where even the briny sands | |
Their product offer to her glowing hands; | |
― 96 ― |
|
For there, by sea-dews nurs'd and airs marine, | |
The Chelidonium blows; in glaucous green, | |
Each refluent tide the thorn'd Eryngium laves, | |
And its pale leaves seem tinctured by the waves; | |
And half-way up the cliff, whose rugged brow | |
Hangs o'er the ever toiling surge below, | |
Springs the light Tamarisk.—The summit bare, | |
Is tufted by the Statice; and there, | |
Crush'd by the fisher, as he stands to mark | |
Some distant signal or approaching bark, | |
The Saltwort's starry stalks are thickly sown, | |
Like humble worth, unheeded and unknown! |
From depths where corals spring from chrystal caves, | |
And break with scarlet branch, the eddying waves, | |
― 97 ― |
|
Where Algæ stream, as change the flowing tides, | |
And where, half flower, half fish, the Polyp hides, | |
And long tenacious bands of sea-lace twine | |
Round palm-shaped leaves impearl'd with coralline. | |
Enamour'd Fancy now the sea-maids calls, | |
And from their grottos dim, and shell-paved halls, | |
Charm'd by her voice, the shining train emerge, | |
And buoyant float above the circling surge; | |
Green Byssus, waving in the sea-born gales, | |
Form'd their thin mantles, and transparent veils, | |
Panier'd in shells, or bound with silver strings, | |
Of silken pinna; each her trophy brings | |
Of plants, from rocks and caverns submarine, | |
With leathery branch, and bladder'd buds between; | |
There, its dark folds the pucker'd laver spread, | |
With trees in miniature of various red; | |
― 98 ― |
|
There flag-shaped olive-leaves, depending hung, | |
And fairy fans from glossy pebbles sprung; | |
Then her terrestrial train the nereids meet, | |
And lay their spoils saline at Flora's feet. |
O! fairest of the fabled forms! that stream, | |
Dress'd by wild Fancy, thro' the poet's dream, | |
Still may thy attributes of leaves and flowers, | |
Thy garden's rich, and shrub-o'ershadow'd bowers, | |
And yellow meads, with Spring's first honours bright, | |
The child's gay heart, and frolic step invite; | |
And, while the careless wanderer explores, | |
The umbrageous forest, or the rugged shores, | |
Climbs the green down, or roams the broom-clad waste, | |
May Truth, and Nature, form his future taste! | |
Goddess! on youth's bless'd hours thy gifts bestow; | |
Bind the fair wreath on virgin-beauty's brow, | |
― 99 ― |
|
And still may Fancy's brightest flowers be wove | |
Round the gold chains of hymeneal love. | |
But most for those, by Sorrow's hands oppress'd, | |
May thy beds blossom, and thy wilds be dress'd; | |
And where by Fortune and the world forgot, | |
The mourner droops in some sequester'd spot, | |
("Sad luxury to vulgar minds unknown,") | |
O'er blighted happiness for ever gone, | |
Yet the dear image seeks not to forget, | |
But woos his grief, and cherishes regret; | |
Loving, with fond and lingering pain, to mourn | |
O'er joys and hopes that never will return;— | |
Thou, visionary power! mayst bid him view | |
Forms not less lovely, and as transient too; | |
And while they soothe the wearied pilgrim's eyes, | |
Afford an antepast of Paradise. |
STUDIES BY THE SEA.
AH! wherefore do the incurious say, | |
That this stupendous ocean wide, | |
No change presents from day to day, | |
Save only the alternate tide; | |
Or save when gales of summer glide | |
Across the lightly crisped wave; | |
Or, when against the cliff's rough side, | |
As equinoctial tempests rave, | |
It wildly bursts; o'erwhelms the deluged strand, | |
Tears down its bounds, and desolates the land? |
He who with more enquiring eyes | |
Doth this extensive scene survey, | |
Beholds innumerous changes rise, | |
As various winds its surface sway; | |
Now o'er its heaving bosom play | |
Small sparkling waves of silver gleam, | |
And as they lightly glide away | |
Illume with fluctuating beam | |
The deepening surge; green as the dewy corn | |
That undulates in April's breezy morn. |
The far off waters then assume | |
A glowing amethystine shade, | |
That changing like the peacock's plume | |
Seems in celestial blue to fade; | |
― 102 ― |
|
Or paler, colder hues of lead, | |
As lurid vapours float on high, | |
Along the ruffling billows spread, | |
While darkly lours the threatening sky; | |
And the small scatter'd barks with outspread shrouds, | |
Catch the long gleams, that fall between the clouds. |
Then day's bright star with blunted rays | |
Seems struggling thro' the sea-fog pale, | |
And doubtful in the heavy haze, | |
Is dimly seen the nearing sail; | |
'Till from the land a fresher gale | |
Disperses the white mist, and clear, | |
As melts away the gauzy veil, | |
The sun-reflecting waves appear; | |
― 103 ― |
|
So, brighter genuine virtue seems to rise | |
From envy's dark invidious calumnies. |
What glories on the sun attend, | |
When the full tides of evening flow, | |
Where in still changing beauty, blend | |
With amber light, the opal's glow; | |
While in the east the diamond bow | |
Rises in virgin lustre bright, | |
And from the horizon seems to throw, | |
A partial line of trembling light | |
To the hush'd shore; and all the tranquil deep | |
Beneath the modest moon, is sooth'd to sleep. |
Forgotten then, the thundering break | |
Of waves, that in the tempest rise, | |
The falling cliff, the shatter'd wreck, | |
The howling blast, the sufferer's cries; | |
For soft the breeze of evening sighs, | |
And murmuring seems in Fancy's ear | |
To whisper fairy lullabies, | |
That tributary waters bear | |
From precipices, dark with piny woods, | |
And inland rocks, and heathy solitudes. |
The vast encircling seas within, | |
What endless swarms of creatures hide , | |
Of burnish'd scale, and spiny fin! | |
These providential instincts guide, | |
― 105 ― |
|
And bid them know the annual tide, | |
When, from unfathom'd waves that swell, | |
Beyond Fuego's stormy side, | |
They come, to cheer the tribes that dwell | |
In Boreal climes; and thro' his half year's night | |
Give to the Lapland savage, food and light. |
From cliffs, that pierce the northern sky; | |
Where eagles rear their sanguine brood, | |
With long awaiting patient eye, | |
Baffled by many a sailing cloud, | |
The Highland native marks the flood, | |
Till bright the quickening billows roll, | |
And hosts of sea-birds, clamouring loud, | |
Track with wild wing the welcome shoal, | |
― 106 ― |
|
Swift o'er the animated current sweep, | |
And bear their silver captives from the deep. |
Sons of the North! your streamy vales | |
With no rich sheaves rejoice and sing; | |
Her flowery robe no fruit conceals, | |
Tho' sweetly smile your tardy spring; | |
Yet every mountain, clothed with ling, | |
Doth from its purple brow survey | |
Your busy sails, that ceaseless bring | |
To the broad frith, and sheltering bay, | |
Riches, by Heaven's parental power supplied,— | |
The harvest of the far embracing tide. | |
― 107 ― |
|
And, where those fractur'd mountains lift | |
O'er the blue wave their towering crest, | |
Each salient ledge and hollow cleft | |
To sea-fowl give a rugged nest. | |
But with instinctive love is drest | |
The Eider's downy cradle; where | |
The mother-bird, her glossy breast | |
Devotes, and with maternal care, | |
And plumeless bosom, stems the toiling seas, | |
That foam round the tempestuous Orcades. |
From heights, whence shuddering sense recoils, | |
And cloud-capped headlands, steep and bare, | |
Sons of the North! your venturous toils | |
Collect your poor and scanty fare. | |
― 108 ― |
|
Urged by imperious Want, you dare | |
Scale the loose cliff, where Gannets hide, | |
Or scarce suspended, in the air | |
Hang perilous; and thus provide | |
The soft voluptuous couch, which not secures | |
To Luxury's pamper'd minions, sleep like yours. |
Revolving still, the waves that now | |
Just ripple on the level shore, | |
Have borne perchance the Indian's prow, | |
Or half congeal'd, 'mid ice rocks hoar, | |
Raved to the Walrus' hollow roar; | |
Or have by currents swift convey'd | |
To the cold coast of Labrador, | |
The relics of the tropic shade; | |
― 109 ― |
|
And to the wondering Esquimaux have shown | |
Leaves of strange shape, and fruits unlike their own. |
No more then, let the incurious say, | |
No change this world of water shows, | |
But as the tides the moon obey, | |
Or tempests rave, or calms repose.— | |
Shew them, its bounteous breast bestows | |
On myriads life; and bid them see | |
In every wave that circling flows, | |
Beauty and use, and harmony— | |
Works of the Power Supreme, who poured the flood, | |
Round the green peopled earth, and call'd it good! |
THE HOROLOGE OF THE FIELDS.
Addressed to a Young Lady, on seeing at the House of
an
Acquaintance a magnificent French Timepiece.
FOR her who owns this splendid toy, | |
Where use with elegance unites, | |
Still may its index point to joy, | |
And moments wing'd with new delights. |
Sweet may resound each silver bell,— | |
And never quick returning chime, | |
Seem in reproving notes to tell, | |
Of hours mispent, and murder'd time. |
Tho' Fortune, Emily, deny | |
To us these splendid works of art, | |
The woods, the lawns, the heaths supply | |
Lessons from Nature to the heart. |
In every copse, and shelter'd dell, | |
Unveil'd to the observant eye, | |
Are faithful monitors, who tell | |
How pass the hours and seasons by. |
The green robed children of the Spring | |
Will mark the periods as they pass, | |
Mingle with leaves Time's feather'd wing, | |
And bind with flowers his silent glass. |
Mark where transparent waters glide, | |
Soft flowing o'er their tranquil bed; | |
There, cradled on the dimpling tide, | |
Nymphæa rests her lovely head. |
But conscious of the earliest beam, | |
She rises from her humid rest, | |
And sees reflected in the stream | |
The virgin whiteness of her breast. |
Till the bright daystar to the west | |
Declines, in Ocean's surge to lave, | |
Then folded in her modest vest, | |
She slumbers on the rocking wave. |
See Hieracium's various tribe, | |
Of plumy seed and radiate flowers, | |
The course of Time their blooms describe | |
And wake or sleep appointed hours. |
Broad o'er its imbricated cup | |
The Goatsbeard spreads its golden rays, | |
But shuts its cautious petals up, | |
Retreating from the noon-tide blaze: |
Pale as a pensive cloister'd nun | |
The Bethlem-star, her face unveils, | |
When o'er the mountain peers the Sun, | |
But shades it from the vesper gales. |
Among the loose and arid sands | |
The humble Arenaria creeps; | |
Slowly the purple star expands, | |
But soon within its calyx sleeps. |
And those small bells so lightly ray'd | |
With young Aurora's rosy hue, | |
Are to the noon-tide Sun display'd, | |
But shut their plaits against the dew. |
On upland slopes the shepherds mark | |
The hour, when as the dial true, | |
Cichorium to the towering Lark, | |
Lifts her soft eyes, serenely blue. |
And thou "Wee crimson tipped flower," | |
Gatherest thy fringed mantle round | |
Thy bosom, at the closing hour, | |
When night drops bathe the turfy ground. |
Unlike Silene, who declines | |
The garish noontide's blazing light; | |
But when the evening crescent shines | |
Gives all her sweetness to the night. |
Thus in each flower and simple bell, | |
That in our path untrodden lie, | |
Are sweet remembrancers who tell | |
How fast the winged moments fly. |
Time will steal on with ceaseless pace, | |
Yet lose we not the fleeting hours, | |
Who still their fairy footsteps trace, | |
As light they dance among the flowers. |
SAINT MONICA.
AMONG deep woods is the dismantled scite | |
Of an old Abbey, where the chaunted rite, | |
By twice ten brethren of the monkish cowl, | |
Was duly sung; and requiems for the soul | |
Of the first founder: For the lordly chief, | |
Who flourish'd paramount of many a fief, | |
Left here a stipend yearly paid, that they, | |
The pious monks, for his repose might say | |
Mass and orisons to Saint Monica. |
Beneath the falling archway overgrown | |
With briars, a bench remains, a single stone, | |
Where sat the indigent, to wait the dole | |
Given at the buttery; that the baron's soul | |
The poor might intercede for; there would rest, | |
Known by his hat of straw with cockles drest, | |
And staff and humble weed of watchet gray, | |
The wandering pilgrim; who came there to pray | |
The intercession of Saint Monica. |
Stern Reformation and the lapse of years | |
Have reft the windows, and no more appears | |
Abbot or martyr on the glass anneal'd; | |
And half the falling cloisters are conceal'd | |
― 119 ― |
|
By ash and elder: the refectory wall | |
Oft in the storm of night is heard to fall, | |
When, wearied by the labours of the day, | |
The half awaken'd cotters, starting say, | |
"It is the ruins of Saint Monica." |
Now with approaching rain is heard the rill, | |
Just trickling thro' a deep and hollow gill | |
By osiers, and the alder's crowding bush, | |
Reeds, and dwarf elder, and the pithy rush, | |
Choak'd and impeded: to the lower ground | |
Slowly it creeps; there traces still are found | |
Of hollow squares, embank'd with beaten clay, | |
Where brightly glitter'd in the eye of day | |
The peopled waters of Saint Monica. |
The chapel pavement, where the name and date, | |
Or monkish rhyme, had mark'd the graven plate, | |
With docks and nettles now is overgrown; | |
And brambles trail above the dead unknown.— | |
Impatient of the heat, the straggling ewe | |
Tinkles her drowsy bell, as nibbling slow | |
She picks the grass among the thistles gray, | |
Whose feather'd seed the light air bears away, | |
O'er the pale relicks of Saint Monica. |
Reecho'd by the walls, the owl obscene | |
Hoots to the night; as thro' the ivy green | |
Whose matted tods the arch and buttress bind, | |
Sobs in low gusts the melancholy wind: | |
― 121 ― |
|
The Conium there, her stalks bedropp'd with red, | |
Rears, with Circea, neighbour of the dead; | |
Atropa too, that, as the beldams say, | |
Shews her black fruit to tempt and to betray, | |
Nods by the mouldering shrine of Monica. |
Old tales and legends are not quite forgot. | |
Still Superstition hovers o'er the spot, | |
And tells how here, the wan and restless sprite, | |
By some way-wilder'd peasant seen at night, | |
Gibbers and shrieks, among the ruins drear; | |
And how the friar's lanthorn will appear | |
Gleaming among the woods, with fearful ray, | |
And from the church-yard take its wavering way, | |
To the dim arches of Saint Monica. |
The antiquary comes not to explore, | |
As once, the unrafter'd roof and pathless floor; | |
For now, no more beneath the vaulted ground | |
Is crosier, cross, or sculptur'd chalice found, | |
Nor record telling of the wassail ale, | |
What time the welcome summons to regale, | |
Given by the matin peal on holiday, | |
The villagers rejoicing to obey, | |
Feasted, in honour of Saint Monica. |
Yet often still at eve, or early morn, | |
Among these ruins shagg'd with fern and thorn, | |
A pensive stranger from his lonely seat | |
Observes the rapid martin, threading fleet | |
― 123 ― |
|
The broken arch: or follows with his eye, | |
The wall-creeper that hunts the burnish'd fly; | |
Sees the newt basking in the sunny ray, | |
Or snail that sinuous winds his shining way, | |
O'er the time-fretted walls of Monica. |
He comes not here, from the sepulchral stone | |
To tear the oblivious pall that Time has thrown, | |
But meditating, marks the power proceed | |
From the mapped lichen, to the plumed weed, | |
From thready mosses to the veined flower, | |
The silent, slow, but ever active power | |
Of Vegetative Life, that o'er Decay | |
Weaves her green mantle, when returning May | |
Dresses the ruins of Saint Monica. |
Oh Nature! ever lovely, ever new, | |
He whom his earliest vows has paid to you | |
Still finds, that life has something to bestow; | |
And while to dark Forgetfulness they go, | |
Man, and the works of man; immortal Youth, | |
Unfading Beauty, and eternal Truth, | |
Your Heaven-indited volume will display, | |
While Art's elaborate monuments decay, | |
Even as these shatter'd aisles, deserted Monica! |
A WALK IN THE SHRUBBERY.
To the Cistus or Rock Rose, a beautiful plant, whose
flowers
expand, and fall off twice in twenty-four hours.
THE Florists, who have fondly watch'd, | |
Some curious bulb from hour to hour, | |
And, to ideal charms attach'd, | |
Derive their glory from a flower; |
Or they, who lose in crouded rooms, | |
Spring's tepid suns and balmy air, | |
And value Flora's fairest blooms, | |
But in proportion as they're rare; |
Feel not the pensive pleasures known | |
To him, who, thro' the morning mist, | |
Explores the bowery shrubs new blown, | |
A moralizing Botanist.— |
He marks, with colours how profuse | |
Some are design'd to please the eye; | |
While beauty some combine with use, | |
In admirable harmony. |
The fruit buds, shadow'd red and white, | |
Amid young leaves of April hue; | |
Convey sensations of delight, | |
And promise fruits autumnal too: |
And, while the Thrush his home and food, | |
Hails, as the flowering thorns unfold, | |
And from its trunk of ebon wood, | |
Rears Cytisus its floating gold; |
The Lilac, whose tall head discloses | |
Groups of such bright empurpled shade, | |
And snow-globes form'd of elfin roses, | |
Seem for exclusive beauty made: |
Such too art thou; when light anew | |
Above the eastern hill is seen, | |
Thy buds, as fearful of the dew, | |
Still wear their sheltering veil of green. |
But in the next more genial hour | |
Thy tender rose-shaped cups unfold, | |
And soon appears the perfect flower, | |
With ruby spots and threads of gold. |
That short and fleeting hour gone by, | |
And even the slightest breath of air, | |
Scarce heard among thy leaves to sigh, | |
Or little bird that flutters there; |
Shakes off thy petals thin and frail, | |
And soon, like half-congealing snow, | |
The sport of every wandering gale, | |
They strew the humid turf below. |
Yet tho' thy gauzy bells fall fast, | |
Long ere appears the evening crescent; | |
Another bloom succeeds the last, | |
As lovely and as evanescent. |
Not so the poet's favourite Rose, | |
She blooms beyond a second day, | |
And even some later beauty shews— | |
Some charm still lingering in decay. |
Thus those, who thro' life's path have pass'd, | |
A path how seldom strewn with flowers! | |
May have met Friendships formed to last | |
Beyond the noonday's golden hours. |
While quickly formed, dissolv'd as soon, | |
Some warm attachments I have known | |
Just flourish for an hour at noon, | |
But leave no trace when overblown. |
Minds that form these, with ardent zeal | |
Their new connexions fondly cherish, | |
And for a moment keenly feel | |
Affection, doomed as soon to perish; |
Incapable of Friendship long, | |
Awake to every new impression, | |
Old friends, becoming ci-devant! | |
Are still replaced by a Succession. |
HOPE.
A RONDEAU.
Parody on Lord Strangford's "Just like Love."
JUST like Hope is yonder bow, | |
That from the center bends so low, | |
Where bright prismatic colours shew | |
How gems of heavenly radiance glow, | |
Just like Hope! |
Yet if, to the illusion new, | |
The pilgrim should the arch pursue, | |
Farther and farther from his view, | |
It flies; then melts in chilling dew, | |
Just like Hope! |
Ye fade, ethereal hues! for ever, | |
While, cold Reason, thy endeavour | |
Sooths not that sad heart, which never | |
Glows with Hope. |
EVENING.
OH! soothing hour, when glowing day, | |
Low in the western wave declines, | |
And village murmurs die away, | |
And bright the vesper planet shines; |
I love to hear the gale of Even | |
Breathing along the new-leaf'd copse, | |
And feel the freshening dew of Heaven, | |
Fall silently in limpid drops. |
For, like a friend's consoling sighs, | |
That breeze of night to me appears; | |
And, as soft dew from Pity's eyes, | |
Descend those pure celestial tears. |
Alas! for those who long have borne, | |
Like me, a heart by sorrow riven, | |
Who, but the plaintive winds, will mourn, | |
What tears will fall, but those of Heaven? |
LOVE AND FOLLY,
FROM THE FABLES OF LA FONTAINE.
LOVE, who now deals to human hearts, | |
Such ill thrown, yet resistless darts, | |
That hapless mortals can't withstand them, | |
Was once less cruel and perverse, | |
Nor did he then his shafts disperse, | |
So much at random. |
It happened, that the thoughtless child | |
Was rambling thro' a flowery wild, | |
Like idle lad in school vacation; | |
Where sauntering now, and now at rest, | |
Stroll'd Folly, who to Love address'd | |
His conversation. |
On trifles he had much to say, | |
Then laughing he propos'd to play, | |
And stake against Love's bow his bauble; | |
The quiver'd gamester smil'd and won, | |
But testy Folly soon began | |
To fret and squabble. |
Loud and more loud the quarrel grows; | |
From words the wranglers went to blows, | |
For Folly's rage is prompt to rise; | |
Till bleeding Love a martyr stood— | |
A stroke from Folly's weapon rude, | |
Put out his eyes. |
Then wild with anguish, Venus pray'd, | |
For vengeance on the idiot's head, | |
And begg'd of cloud-compelling Jove, | |
His swiftest lightening, to destroy, | |
The mischievous malignant boy | |
That blinded Love. |
"Folly is immortal," Jove replied, | |
"But, tho' your prayer must be denied, | |
"An endless penance is decreed him; | |
"For Love, tho' blind, will reign around | |
"The world; but still where-ever found, | |
"Folly shall lead him." |
ON THE APHORISM,
"L'Amitié est l'Amour sans ailes."
FRIENDSHIP, as some sage poet sings, | |
Is chasten'd Love, depriv'd of wings, | |
Without all wish or power to wander; | |
Less volatile, but not less tender: | |
Yet says the proverbs—"Sly and slow | |
"Love creeps, even where he cannot go;" | |
To clip his pinions then is vain, | |
His old propensities remain; | |
― 140 ― |
|
And she, who years beyond fifteen, | |
Has counted twenty, may have seen | |
How rarely unplum'd Love will stay; | |
He flies not—but he coolly walks away. |
NOTES.
NOTES.
BEACHY HEAD.
In crossing the Channel from the coast of France, Beachy-Head is the first land made.
"Stretch'd forth his arm ——"
Alluding to an idea that this Island was once joined to the continent of Europe, and torn from it by some
- Terns.—Sterna hirundo, or Sea Swallow.
- Gulls.—Larus canus.
- Tarrocks.—Larus tridactylus.
Gray Choughs.—Corvus Graculus, Cornish Choughs, or, as these birds are called by the Sussex people, Saddle-backed Crows, build in great numbers on this coast.
Cotton. (Gossypium herbaceum.)
Diamonds, the hardest and most valuable of precious stones.
For the extraordinary exertions of the Indians in diving for the pearl oysters, see the account of the Pearl Fisheries in Percival's View of Ceylon.
In crossing the channel this bird is heard at night, uttering a short cry, and flitting along near the surface of the waves.␣␣The sailors call it the Sea Snipe;
The Norman launch'd his galleys, and the bay
O'er which that mass of ruin∗ frowns even now
In vain and sullen menace, then received
The new invaders,"&c.
∗ Pevensey Castle.
The Scandinavians†, and other inhabitants of the north, began towards the end of the 8th century, to leave their inhospitable climate in search of the produce of more fortunate countries.
† Scandinavia—Modern Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Lapland, &c.The North-men made inroads on the coasts of France; and carrying back immense booty, excited their compatriots to engage in the same piratical voyages: and they were afterwards joined by numbers of necessitous and daring adventurers from the coasts of Provence and Sicily.
In 844, these wandering innovators had a great number of vessels at sea; and again visiting the coasts of France, Spain, and England, the following year they penetrated even to Paris: and the unfortunate Charles the Bald, king of France, purchased at a high price, the retreat of the banditti he had no other means of repelling.
These successful expeditions continued for some time; till Rollo, otherwise Raoul, assembled a number of followers, and after a descent on England,
Battle Abbey was raised by the Conqueror, and endowed with an ample revenue, that masses might be said night and day for the souls of those who perished in battle.
In 1690, king William being then in Ireland, Tourville, the French admiral, arrived on the coast of England.␣␣His fleet consisted of seventy-eight large ships, and twenty-two fire-ships. ␣␣Lord Torrington, the English admiral, lay at St. Helens, with only forty English and a few Dutch ships; and conscious of the disadvantage under which he should give battle, he ran up between the enemy's fleet and the coast, to protect it.␣␣The queen's council, dictated to by Russel, persuaded her to order Torrington to venture a battle. The orders Torrington appears to have obeyed reluctantly:␣␣his fleet now consisted of twenty-two Dutch and thirty-four English ships.␣␣Evertson, the Dutch admiral, was eager to obtain glory; Torring-
Of one, who sometimes watches on the heights," &c.
The shepherds and labourers of this tract of country, a hardy and athletic race of men, are almost universally engaged in the contraband trade, carried on for the coarsest and most destructive spirits, with the opposite coast. ␣␣When no other vessel will venture to sea, these men hazard their lives to elude the watchfulness of the Revenue officers, and to secure their cargoes.
They scare the plover——"
- Sun-dew.—Drosera rotundifolia
- Buck-bean.—Menyanthes trifoliatum.
- Plover.—Tringa vanellus.
Coot.—Fulica aterrima.
"With blossom'd furze, unprofitably gay."
Goldsmith.
The Beacons formerly lighted up on the hills to give notice of the approach of an enemy. ␣␣These signals would still be used in case of alarm, if the Telegraph now substituted could not be distinguished on account of fog or darkness.
Curlew.—Charadrius oedicnemus.
With her white rocks, the strong imperious tide."
Vecta.—The Isle of Wight, which breaks the force of the waves when they are driven by south-west winds against this long and open coast.␣␣It is somewhere described as "Vecta shouldering the Western Waves."
Every cottage in this country has its orchard; and I imagine that not even those of Herefordshire, or Worcestershire, exhibit a more beautiful prospect, when the trees are in bloom, and the "Primavera candida e vermiglia," is every where so enchanting.
Vetch.—Vicia sylvatica.
- Bittersweet—Solanum dulcamara.
- Bryony.—Bryonia alba.
Bindweed.—Convolvulus sepium.
- Harebell.—Hyacinthus non scriptus.
- Pagil.—-Primula veris.
Oxalis acetosella.
Anemóne nemorosa.—It appears to be settled on late and excellent authorities, that this word should not be accented on the second syllable, but on the penultima.␣␣I have however ventured the more known accentuation, as more generally used, and suiting better the nature of my verse.
Mingled, and seeming of resembling substance."
Among the crumbling chalk I have often found shells, some quite in a fossil state and hardly dis-
The theory here slightly hinted at, is taken from an idea started by Mr. White.
These Downs are not only marked with traces of encampments, which from their forms are called Roman or Danish; but there are numerous tumuli among them. ␣␣Some of which having been opened a few years ago, were supposed by a learned antiquary to contain the remains of the original natives of the country.
That the legions of Claudius were in this part of Britain appears certain.␣␣ Since this emperor re-
Auxiliary reluctant, hither led—"
In the year 1740, some workmen digging in the park at Burton in Sussex, discovered, nine feet below the surface, the teeth and bones of an elephant; two of the former were seven feet eight inches in length.␣␣ There were besides these, tusks, one of which broke in removing it, a grinder not at all decayed, and a part of the jaw-bone, with bones of the knee and thigh, and several others.␣␣Some of them remained very lately at Burthon House, the seat of John Biddulph, Esq.␣␣Others were in possession of the Rev. Dr.
The peasants believe that the large bones sometimes found belonged to giants, who formerly lived on the hills.␣␣The devil also has a great deal to do with the remarkable forms of hill and vale: the Devil's Punch Bowl, the Devil's Leaps, and the Devil's Dyke, are names given to deep hollows, or high and abrupt ridges, in this and the neighbouring county.
The incursions of the Danes were for many ages the scourge of this island.
The Aborigines of this country lived in woods, unsheltered but by trees and caves; and were probably
The grass called Sheep's Fescue, (Festuca ovina,) clothes these Downs with the softest turf.
"——————— some resembling bees | |
In velvet vest intent on their sweet toil—" |
Ophrys apifera, Bee Ophrys, or Orchis, found plentifully on the hills, as well as the next.
Ophrys muscifera.—Fly Orchis.␣␣Linnæus, misled by the variations to which some of this tribe are really subject, has perhaps too rashly esteemed all
(Campanula rotundifolia.)
"——————— The mountain thymePurples the hassock of the heaving mole."
Thymus serpyllum.␣␣ "It is a common notion, that the flesh of sheep which feed upon aromatic plants, particularly wild thyme, is superior in flavour to other mutton.␣␣The truth is, that sheep do not crop these aromatic plants, unless now and then by accident, or when they are first turned on hungry to downs, heaths, or commons; but the soil and situations fa-
Tormentilla reptans.
"And bird's foot trefoil, and the lesser tribesOf hawkweed; spangling it with fringed stars.—"
- Bird's foot trefoil.—Trifolium ornithopoides.
- Hawkweed.—Hieracium, many sorts.
The downs, especially to the south, where they are less abrupt, are in many places under the plough; and the attention of the shepherds is there particularly required to keep the flocks from trespassing.
Square holes cut in the turf, into which a wire noose is fixed, to catch Wheatears.␣␣Mr. White says, that these birds (Motacilla oenanthe) are never taken beyond the river Adur, and Beding Hill; but this is certainly a mistake.
These birds are extremely fearful, and on the slight-
The social bird, who from his native haunts—"
The Yellow Wagtail.—Motacilla flava.␣␣ It frequents the banks of rivulets in winter, making its nest in meadows and corn-fields. ␣␣ But after the breeding season is over, it haunts downs and sheepwalks, and is seen constantly among the flocks, probably for the sake of the insects it picks up. ␣␣In France the shepherds call it La Bergeronette, and say it often gives them, by its cry, notice of approaching danger.
Bent by the sea blast,—"
The strong winds from the south-west occasion almost all the trees, which on these hills are exposed to it, to grow the other way.
So extensive are some of the views from these hills, that only the want of power in the human eye to travel so far, prevents London itself being discerned.␣␣ Description falls so infinitely short of the reality, that only here and there, distinct features can be given.
A scar of chalk in a bill beyond Sevenoaks in Kent, is very distinctly seen of a clear day.
The hills about Dorking in Surry; over almost the whole extent of which county the prospect extends.
This is an high ridge, extending between Sussex and Surry.␣␣It is covered with heath, and has almost always a dark appearance.␣␣On it is a telegraph.
In this country there are several of the fortresses or castles built by Stephen of Blois, in his contention for the kingdom, with the daughter of Henry the First, the empress Matilda.␣␣Some of these are now converted into farm houses.
Dr. Aikin remarks, I believe, in his essay "On the Application of Natural History to the Purposes of Poetry," how many of our best poets have noticed the same circumstance, the hum of the Dor Beetle (Scaraboeus stercorarius,) among the sounds heard by the evening wanderer. ␣␣I remember only
The Barkmen.—As soon as the sap begins to rise, the trees intended for felling are cut and barked. At which time the men who are employed in that business pass whole days in the woods.
The Wedgecutters.—The wedges used in ship-build-
Truffles are found under the beech woods, by means of small dogs trained to hunt them by the scent.
Lychnis dioica.
Aquilegia vulgaris.
Shakspeare describes the Cuckoo buds as being yellow.␣␣He probably meant the numerous Ranunculi, or March marigolds (Caltha palustris,) which so gild the meadows in Spring; but poets have never been
Flag-flower.—Iris pseudacorus.
Yaffils.—Woodpeckers (Picus); three or four species in Britain.
"And gales that close—"Milton.
"And liquid notes that close the eye of day."
The idea here meant to be conveyed is of the evening wind, so welcome after a hot day of Summer, and which appears to sooth and lull all nature into tranquillity.
The Robin, (Motacilla rubecula,) which is always heard after other songsters have ceased to sing.
The Woodlark, (Alauda nemorosa,) sings very late.
Reed-wrens, (Motacilla arundinacea,) sing all the summer and autumn, and are often heard during the night.
An allusion to the visionary delights of the new
In a cavern almost immediately under the cliff called Beachy Head, there lived, as the people of the country believed, a man of the name of Darby, who for many years had no other abode than this cave, and subsisted almost entirely on shell-fish.␣␣ He had
Sometimes in thick weather the sheep feeding on the summit of the cliff, miss their footing, and are killed by the fall.
Delphinus phocoena.
NOTES TO THE FABLES.
These are old stories, which I have endeavoured to tell with such a degree of novelty, as natural history can lend them.␣␣They have been so often repeated, that probably the original inventors have been long since forgotten.␣␣La Fontaine, whose graceful simplicity in such light narrative has been universally allowed, is the most usually referred to.
La Fontaine, in his manner of telling the story of Les deux Pigeons, calls them Friends. ␣␣But the proverbial conjugal fidelity of this race of birds, makes it seem more natural to describe them as the pigeon and his mate.␣␣If it be objected, that the Truant Dove is represented as repeating the apology of Henry the Fourth of France—"Toujours perdrix, toujours Chapon bouilli ne vaut rien;" and that his partner talks
"For in the days of yore the birds of parts,
Were bred to speak and sing; and learn the liberal arts."
In fact, if the mind momentarily acquiesces in the absurdity of animals having the passions and the faculties of man, every thing else may be granted.
It might be necessary to apologize for inserting these fables; but that which Prior and Cowper, and so many other of the most eminent writers have not disdained, can never need any defence.
La Fontaine begins the second Fable here inserted thus:
"L'Alouette et ses Petits, avec le Maître d'un Champ. Ne t'attends qu'à toi seul, c'est un commun proverbe; Voici comme Esope le mit En credit."
There is nothing I am more desirous of avoiding, even in a trifle like this, than the charge of plagiarism. ␣␣ I must in the present instance defend myself by stating, that so long since as April 1805, Mr. Johnson was in possession of the MS. copy of this Fable.␣␣In July 1806, a friend brought with her from London, a volume called "The Birds of Scotland, with other Poems," in which I read, what, if my fable had been first published, I might perhaps have thought very like an imitation.␣␣ My lines of the Lark are:
"——————But like a dart
― 183 ―From his low homested with the morning springs,
And far above the floating vapour sings,
At such an height,
That even the shepherd lad upon the hill,
Hearing his matin note so shrill,
With shaded eyes against the lustre bright,
Scarce sees him twinkling in flood of light—"
Mr. Graham, in a more lengthened description, says of the Lark:
"——————— he towers
In loftier poise, with sweeter fuller pipe,
Cheering the ploughman at his furrow end,
The while he clears the share; or listening, leans
Upon his paddle staff; and with rais'd hand
Shadows his half-shut eyes, striving to scan
The songster melting in the flood of light—"
The extreme resemblance of these passages may be accounted for, however, by the observation very justly made, that natural objects being equally visible to all, it is very probable that descriptions of such objects will be often alike.
I cannot help remarking another coincidence.␣␣ My lines on the female Lark sitting, are:
"She leaves her nest reluctant and in haste,
And scarce allows herself to taste
A dew drop and a few small seeds—"
Mr. Graham says of the Wren:
" ————never flitting off,
Save when the morning Sun is high, to drink
A dew drop from the nearest flower cup—"
ADDITIONAL NOTES TO THE FABLES.
The varieties of pigeons here named, as Fantail, Carrier, Pouter, Almond Tumbler, and Nun, with many others, are varieties produced by art from the common pigeon.␣␣Societies exist in which prizes are given to those who produce birds nearest to the standard of imaginary perfection.␣␣A Pouter is a bird of which the crop is capable of being so much distended with wind, that the animal appears to be without a head.␣␣On this enlargement of the crop depends the beauty and value of the bird.
These Fanciers are to Ornithologists, what Flower Fanciers are to Botanists.
NOTES ON THE SWALLOW.
The Gorse-Furze.—Ulex Europæus.␣␣ Called so in many counties of England.
Veronica chamoedrys.—This elegant flower, though not celebrated like the Primrose, Cowslip, and Daisy, is in all its varieties one of the most beautiful of indigenous plants.
There are two or three fables that relate the knowledge acquired by some Indian recluse, of the language of birds.
The Cuckoo, the Rail, and many species of Doves, are all emigrants.
"Were you in Asia? O relate,If there your fabled sister's woes
She seem'd in sorrow to relate,
Or sings she but to celebrate
Her nuptials with the Rose?"
Alluding to the Ovidian fable of the Metamorphosis of Procne and Philomela into the Swallow and the Nightingale; and to the oriental story of the Loves of the Nightingale and the Rose; which is told with such elegant extravagance in the Botanic Garden.
Accurate observers have remarked, that an equal
In the cliff's excavated brow," &c.
Many persons have supported the idea, that the Hirundines linger concealed among rocks and hollows in a torpid state, and that all do not emigrate.
Approaching dearth of insect food,
To isles and willowy aits you go."
Another opinion is, that the Swallows, at the time they disappear, assemble about rivers and ponds, and
NOTES TO FLORA
"The spleen is seldom felt where Flora reigns— | |
The lowering eye, the petulance, the frown, | |
And sullen sadness, that do shade, distort, | |
And mar the face of Beauty, when no cause | |
For such immeasurable grief appears, | |
These Flora banishes." |
Saxifraga hypnoides.—Moss Saxifrage, commonly called Ladies' Cushion.
Eriophorum angustifolium.
Convolvulus arvensis.—A remarkably pretty plant, but no favourite with the husbandman.
Scandix pecten.—Venus' comb or Shepherd's needle.
Anthoxanthum odoratum.—Vernal Meadow Grass. It is to this grass that hay owes its fine odour.
Aphis, or Aphides.—These are the "myriads brushed from Russian wilds;" the blights, cankers, lice, or vermin, to use common phrases, that so often disfigure, and destroy the fairest vegetable productions.
Lichen.—Of these many have forms of shields, when in fructification.
Lunaria annua.—Moonwort, usually called Honesty.
Digitalis purpurea.
Scutellaria galericulata.—Small skull-cap.
Leontodon officinalis.—Common Dent-de-lion.
Arum maculatum—Vulgarly Cuckoo pint, or Lords and Ladies.
Arctium lappa.
The Dragon-fly, or as it is called in the southern countries, the Horse-stinger, though it preys only on other insects. ␣␣Several sorts of these are seen about water; but its introduction here is a poetical licence, as it does not feed on, or injure flowers.
Tradescantia virginica.—The silk-like tuft within this plant appears to the eye composed of very fine filaments; but on examining one of these small silky threads through a microscope, it looks like a string of Amethysts.
Cistus helianthemum.␣␣Dwarf Cistus.
Yucca filamentosa.
Apis centuncularis.␣␣This insect weaves, or rather cements rose leaves together, to form its cell.
An elegant shrub, of which Cowper thus speaks:
"Hypericum all bloom, so thick a swarm | |
Of flowers, like flies clothing her slender rods, | |
That scarce a leaf appears." |
It seems admirably adapted to a fairy garland.
Passiflora cerulea.
The sheath from which many flowers spring, such as the Narcissus, &c.
The scales of one species of the Xeranthemum are particularly elegant.
Ophrys spiralis.—Ladies traces.
The following lines describing well known flowers, notes would be superfluous.
Polypodium filix foemina.
Asplenium scolopendrium.
Motacilla salicaria. ␣␣The Reed Sparrow, or Willow Wren. ␣␣A bird that in a low and sweet note imitates several others, and sings all night.
"And the Halcyon hides."Alcedo hispida.—The Kingsfisher, or Halcyon, one of the most beautiful of English birds.
Nymphæa alba.
Galium palustre.—White Ladies' bedstraw.
Epilobiums.—Willow herbs---various species.
Iris patustris.—Yellow Iris.
"—— and here the Arrowhead," &c.Sagittaria sagittifolia.
Ranunculus aquaticus.
Butomus umbellatus.␣␣The only native of England of the class Enneandria.
Chelidonium glaucium.␣␣The horned or sea Poppy.
Eryngium maritimum.—Sea Holly.
Tamarix gallica.␣␣This elegant plant is not very uncommon on cliffs in the West of England, and was in 1800 to be found on an high rock to the eastward of the town of Hastings in Sussex.
Statice armeria.—Sea Pink, Sea Lavender, commonly called Thrift, is frequently used for borders of flower-beds. ␣␣It covers some of the most sterile cliffs.
Salsola kali.␣␣This plant when burnt affords a fossile alkali, and is used in the manufacture of glass.␣␣The best is brought from the Mediterranean, and forms a considerable article of commerce.␣␣It is very frequent on the cliffs on the Sussex coast.
The Algæ include all the sea plants, and some other aquatics.
The Polypus or Sea Anemone.␣␣Coralline is, if I do not misunderstand the only book I have to consult, a shelly substance, the work of sea insects, adhering to stones and to sea-weeds.
Flos aquæ.——Paper byssus; a semitransparent substance floating on the waves.
The Pinna, or Sea Wing, is contained in a two-
The subsequent lines attempt a description of Sea Plants, without any correct classification.
NOTES TO STUDIES BY THE SEA.
Whoever has listened on a still summer or autumnal evening, to the murmurs of the small waves, just
The course of those wonderful swarms of fishes that take their annual journey is, I believe, less understood than the emigration of birds.␣␣I suppose them, without having any particular ground for my conjecture, to begin their voyage from beyond the extreme point of the southern continent of America.␣␣Many of the northern nations live almost entirely on fish. ␣␣Their light, during the long night of an arctic winter, is supplied by the oil of marine animals.
In the countries where the produce of the sea is so necessary to human life, the arrival of shoals of fish is most eagerly waited for by the hardy inhabitant. Thrown on the summit of an high cliff, overlooking the sea, the native watches for the approach of the expected good, and sees with pleasure the numerous sea-birds, who by an instinct superior to his own, perceive it at a far greater distance, and follow to take their share of the swarming multitude.
Ling.—A name given in many parts of England to the Erica vulgaris or Common Heath.
Anas mollissima.␣␣While many sea-birds deposit their eggs on the bare rocks, the Eider duck lines her nest most carefully with the feathers from her own breast, which are particularly fine and light: the nest is robbed, and she a second time unplumes herself for the accommodation of her young.␣␣If the lining be again taken away, the drake lends his breast feathers; but if after that, their unreasonable persecutors deprive it of its lining, they abandon the nest in despair, the master of the domicile wisely judging, that any further sacrifice would be useless.
Pelicanus bassanus. ␣␣The Gannet builds on the highest rocks.
Hang perilous."
Suspended by a slight rope, the adventurous native of the north of Scotland is let down from the highest cliffs that hang over the sea, while with little or no support, he collects the eggs of the sea fowl, in a basket tied round his waist. ␣␣The feathers also of these birds gathered from the rocks are a great object to these poor industrious people.
Trichecus rosmarus.—The Walrus or Morse; a creature of the Seal kind, now said to be no longer found on the coast of Scotland, but still inhabiting other northern countries.␣␣They are sometimes eighteen or twenty feet long, and they roar like bulls.
Gulph currents are supposed to throw the remains of fruits of the tropical regions on the most northern coast of America; and it is asserted that the same fruits are also found on the coast of Norway.␣␣See "Les Etudes de la Nature."
NOTES ON THE HOROLOGE OF THE FIELDS.
The sleep of plants has been frequently the subject of inquiry and admiration.
"Vigiliæ Plantarum.—Botanists, under this term, comprehend the precise time of the day in which the flowers of different plants open, expand, and shut.␣␣As all plants do not flower in the same season, or month; in like manner, those which flower the same day in the same place, do not open and shut precisely at the same hour. ␣␣Some open in the morning, as the lipped flowers, and compound flowers with flat spreading petals; others at noon, as the mallows; and a third set in the evening, or after sun-set, as some Geraniums and Opuntias.␣␣The hour of shutting is equally determined.␣␣Of those which open in the morning,
Nymphæa alba.—The flower of this beautiful aquatic opens about seven in the morning, closes about four in the afternoon, and then lies down upon the surface of the water. ␣␣ Linnæus.
All I believe of the solar tribe; the two mentioned by Withering are the sabaudum and murorum.␣␣The first opens at seven, and shuts between one and two the other expands at six in the morning, and closes between two and three in the afternoon.
Tragopogon pratense.—A most unfortunate name for poetry.␣␣ The yellow sort, which is the most common, opens about three in the morning, and closes between nine and ten. ␣␣ Withering.
Ornithogalum umbellatum.
Arenaria marina.—Flowers open at nine o'clock in the morning, and shut between two and three in the afternoon. ␣␣ Lightfoot's Flora Scotica.
With young Aurora's rosy hue—"
Convolvulus arvensis.—The flowers close in the evening.
Cichorium intybus.—Wild Succory, Cichory, or Endive. ␣␣The flowers open at eight o'clock in the morning, and close at four in the afternoon.
Withering.Quoted from Burn's address to the mountain daisy.␣␣The flowers close at night.
Silene noctiflora.—
"Flowers opening in the night, sweet-scented in the summer, not so in the autumn."Withering's Botany.
NOTES ON SAINT MONICA.
Gill is a word understood in many parts of England, and more particularly in the North, to mean an hollow watercourse, or an hollow overshadowed with coppice and brush wood, such as frequently occur in hilly countries.␣␣It has the same meaning as Gully, a deep trench in the earth, so frequent in the West Indies,
Whose matted tods," &c.
A judicious friend objected to this expression as obscure; but it has the authority of Spencer.
"At length within an Ivy todShepherd's Calendar. Ecl. 3.
There shrouded was the little God."
And I think I could quote other poets as having used it.
Conium maculatum.
Atropa belladonna.
The word Gibber has been also objected to; but besides that it appears to me very expressive, I have for its use the example of Shakspeare:
"—————— the sheeted deadHamlet.
Did squeal and gibber in the streets of Rome."
Certhia muraria.—This bird frequents old towers, castles, and walls; feeding on insects.
Lacerta vulgaris.—This reptile in its complete state lives among rubbish and old walls.␣␣ It is the Wall Newt of Shakspeare, as part of the food of poor Tom:
"The wall newt and the water newt,With rats and mice and such small deer,
Have been Tom's food for many a year."
And is commonly known by the name of Evett or Eft; and from its ugliness is held in abhorrence, and is supposed to be venomous, though perfectly harmless.
NOTES TO A WALK IN THE SHRUBBERY.
The extravagant fondness for the cultivation of those flowers which the art of the gardener can improve, such as Tulips, Auriculas, and Carnations, has excited laughter and contempt; and was, I think, sometimes confounded with the Science of Botany, with which it has little to do.␣␣A Florist, however, has very different pursuits and purposes from a Botanist.
Cistus ladaniferus.—Gum cistus.␣␣This plant took its trivial name from its having been supposed to produce the ladanum of the shops, and ought to have been changed when the mistake was detected.
Cytisus laburnum.␣␣This beautiful tree, of which there are many sorts, attains great perfection in this country.␣␣The wood is black, of a fine grain, and takes a polish like Ebony.␣␣The French call it from thence, L'Ebene; the Ebony tree.
Viburnum, commonly called Guelder Rose.—A shrub of great beauty, of which the globular groups are composed of single monopetalous flowers: it is a cultivated variety of the Viburnum opulus, Water-elder of the hedges, sometimes called The Wayfaring Tree.
NOTES ON LOVE AND FOLLY.
This is called the most elegant of the Fables of La Fontaine, though it is perhaps told with less simplicity than is generally his perfection.␣␣But the close is admirable.
"Quand on eut bien considéré
L'interêt du public, celui de la patrie,
Le résultat enfin de la suprême cour
Fut, de condamnar la Folie
A servir de guide à l'Amour."
When kings and great men, to divert the tedious
ERRATA.
- Page 41, line 12, for bows read boughs.
- ——46, —— 6, insert Amanda.
THE END.
Lately published,
BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
-
1. ␣␣CONVERSATIONS, with POETRY; chiefly on Subjects of Natural History.␣␣For the Use of Young People.␣␣␣2 Vols. Price 7s.
-
2. ␣␣And speedily will be published, A HISTORY OF BIRDS, for the Use of Young People, in 2 Vols.
Printed by W. Pople,
22, Old Boswell Court, Strand.
Courtesy of University of California, Davis. General Library. Digital Intitiatives Program.; http://digital.lib.ucdavis.edu/projects/bwrp
http://content.cdlib.org/view?docId=kt609nc030&brand=oac4
Title: Beachy Head
By: Smith, Charlotte Turner, 1749‐1806, creator, British Women Romantic Poets Project
Date: 1998 (issued)
Contributing Institution: University of California, Davis. General Library. Digital Intitiatives Program.; http://digital.lib.ucdavis.edu/projects/bwrp
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