12

Riding adown the country lanes

One day in spring,

Heavy at heart with all the pains

Of man’s imagining:—

The mist was not yet melted quite

Into the sky:

The small round sun was dazzling white,

The merry larks sang high:

The grassy northern slopes were laid

In sparkling dew,

Out of the slow-retreating shade

Turning from sleep anew:

Deep in the sunny vale a burn

Ran with the lane,

O’erhung with ivy, moss and fern

It laughed in joyful strain:

And primroses shot long and lush

Their cluster’d cream:

Robin and wren and amorous thrush

Carol’d above the stream:

The stillness of the lenten air

Call’d into sound

The motions of all life that were

In field and farm around:

So fair it was, so sweet and bright,

The jocund Spring

Awoke in me the old delight

Of man’s imagining,

Riding adown the country lanes:

The larks sang high.—

O heart! for all thy griefs and pains

Thou shalt be loth to die.


13
PATER FILIO

Sense with keenest edge unusèd,

Yet unsteel’d by scathing fire;

Lovely feet as yet unbruisèd

On the ways of dark desire;

Sweetest hope that lookest smiling

O’er the wilderness defiling!

Why such beauty, to be blighted

By the swarm of foul destruction?

Why such innocence delighted,

When sin stalks to thy seduction?

All the litanies e’er chaunted

Shall not keep thy faith undaunted.

I have pray’d the sainted Morning

To unclasp her hands to hold thee;

From resignful Eve’s adorning

Stol’n a robe of peace to enfold thee;

With all charms of man’s contriving

Arm’d thee for thy lonely striving.

Me too once unthinking Nature,

—Whence Love’s timeless mockery took me,—

Fashion’d so divine a creature,

Yea, and like a beast forsook me.

I forgave, but tell the measure

Of her crime in thee, my treasure.


14
NOVEMBER

The lonely season in lonely lands, when fled

Are half the birds, and mists lie low, and the sun

Is rarely seen, nor strayeth far from his bed;

The short days pass unwelcomed one by one.

Out by the ricks the mantled engine stands

Crestfallen, deserted,—for now all hands

Are told to the plough,—and ere it is dawn appear

The teams following and crossing far and near,

As hour by hour they broaden the brown bands

Of the striped fields; and behind them firk and prance

The heavy rooks, and daws grey-pated dance:

As awhile, surmounting a crest, in sharp outline

(A miniature of toil, a gem’s design,)

They are pictured, horses and men, or now near by

Above the lane they shout lifting the share,

By the trim hedgerow bloom’d with purple air;

Where, under the thorns, dead leaves in huddle lie

Packed by the gales of Autumn, and in and out

The small wrens glide

With a happy note of cheer,

And yellow amorets flutter above and about,

Gay, familiar in fear.

And now, if the night shall be cold, across the sky

Linnets and twites, in small flocks helter-skelter,

All the afternoon to the gardens fly,

From thistle-pastures hurrying to gain the shelter

Of American rhododendron or cherry-laurel:

And here and there, near chilly setting of sun,

In an isolated tree a congregation

Of starlings chatter and chide,

Thickset as summer leaves, in garrulous quarrel:

Suddenly they hush as one,—

The tree top springs,—

And off, with a whirr of wings,

They fly by the score

To the holly-thicket, and there with myriads more

Dispute for the roosts; and from the unseen nation

A babel of tongues, like running water unceasing,

Makes live the wood, the flocking cries increasing,

Wrangling discordantly, incessantly,

While falls the night on them self-occupied;

The long dark night, that lengthens slow,

Deepening with Winter to starve grass and tree,

And soon to bury in snow

The Earth, that, sleeping ’neath her frozen stole,

Shall dream a dream crept from the sunless pole

Of how her end shall be.


15
WINTER NIGHTFALL

The day begins to droop,—

Its course is done:

But nothing tells the place

Of the setting sun.

The hazy darkness deepens,

And up the lane

You may hear, but cannot see,

The homing wain.

An engine pants and hums

In the farm hard by:

Its lowering smoke is lost

In the lowering sky.

The soaking branches drip,

And all night through

The dropping will not cease

In the avenue.

A tall man there in the house

Must keep his chair:

He knows he will never again

Breathe the spring air:

His heart is worn with work;

He is giddy and sick

If he rise to go as far

As the nearest rick:

He thinks of his morn of life,

His hale, strong years;

And braves as he may the night

Of darkness and tears.