“THERE IS A SHAPELESS CROWD OF UNHEWN STONES”

Numerous fragments of verse, more or less unfinished, occur in the Grasmere Journals, written by Dorothy Wordsworth. One of these—which is broken up into irregular fragments, and very incomplete—is evidently part of the material which was written about the old Cumbrian shepherd Michael. The successive alterations of the text of the poem Michael are in the Grasmere Journal. These fragments have a special topographical interest, from their description of Helvellyn, and its spring, the fountain of the mists, and the stones on the summit. On the outside leather cover of the MS. book there is written, “May to Dec. 1802.”

The following lines come first:—

There is a shapeless crowd of unhewn stones[345]

That lie together, some in heaps, and some

In lines, that seem to keep themselves alive

In the last dotage of a dying form.

At least so seems it to a man who stands

In such a lonely place.

These are followed by a few lines, some of which were afterwards used in The Prelude (see vol. iii. p. 269):—

Shall he who gives his days to low pursuits,

Amid the undistinguishable crowd

Of cities, ’mid the same eternal flow

Of the same objects, melted and reduced

To one identity, by differences

That have no law, no meaning, and no end,

Shall he feel yearning to those lifeless forms,

And shall we think that Nature is less kind

To those, who all day long, through a long life,

Have walked within her sight? It cannot be.

Mary Wordsworth, Dorothy Wordsworth, William Wordsworth.

Sat. Eve., 20 past 6, May 29.

Other fragments follow, less worthy of preservation. Then the passage, which occurs in book xiii. of The Prelude, beginning—

There are who think that strong affection, love,

(see vol. iii. p. 361), with one or two variations from the final text, which were not improvements.

Five lines on Helvellyn, afterwards included in the Musings near Aquapendente (see vol. viii. p. 47, ll. 61-65), come next.

The fragments referring to Michael are written down, probably just as the brother dictated them to his sister, and would be—if not unintelligible—certainly without any literary connection or unity, were they printed in the order in which they occur. I therefore transpose them slightly, to give something like continuity to the whole; which remains, of course, a torso.

I will relate a tale for those who love

To lie beside the lonely mountain brooks,

And hear the voices of the winds and flowers.

… It befell

At the first falling of the autumnal snows,

Old Michael and his son one day went forth

In search of a stray sheep. It was the time

When from the heights our shepherds drive their flocks

To gather all their mountain family

Into the homestalls, ere they send them back

There to defend themselves the winter long.

Old Michael for this purpose had driven down

His flock into the vale, but as it chanced,

A single sheep was wanting. They had sought

The straggler during all the previous day

All over their own pastures, and beyond.

And now at sunrise, sallying forth again

Far did they go that morning: with their search

Beginning towards the south, where from Dove Crag

(Ill home for bird so gentle), they looked down

On Deep-dale-head, and Brothers water (named

From those two Brothers that were drowned therein);

Thence northward did they pass by Arthur’s seat,[346]

And Fairfield’s highest summit, on the right

Leaving St. Sunday’s Crag, to Grisdale tarn

They shot, and over that cloud-loving hill,

Seat-Sandal, a fond lover of the clouds;

Thence up Helvellyn, a superior mount,

With prospect underneath of Striding edge,

And Grisdale’s houseless vale, along the brink

Of Sheep-cot-cove, and those two other coves,

Huge skeletons of crags which from the coast

Of old Helvellyn spread their arms abroad

And make a stormy harbour for the winds.

Far went these shepherds in their devious quest,

From mountain ridges peeping as they passed

Down into every nook; …

… and many a sheep

On height or bottom[347] did they see, in flocks

Or single. And although it needs must seem

Hard to believe, yet could they well discern

Even at the utmost distance of two miles

(Such strength of vision to the shepherd’s eye

Doth practice give) that neither in the flocks

Nor in the single sheep was what they sought.

So to Helvellyn’s eastern side they went,

Down looking on that hollow, where the pool

Of Thirlmere flashes like a warrior’s shield

His light high up among the gloomy rocks,

With sight of now and then a straggling gleam

On Armath’s[348] pleasant fields. And now they came,

To that high spring which bears no human name,

As one unknown by others, aptly called

The fountain of the mists. The father stooped

To drink of the clear water, laid himself

Flat on the ground, even as a boy might do,

To drink of the cold well. When in like sort

His son had drunk, the old man said to him

That now he might be proud, for he that day

Had slaked his thirst out of a famous well,

The highest fountain known on British land.

Thence, journeying on a second time, they passed

Those small flat stones, which, ranged by traveller’s hands

In cyphers on Helvellyn’s highest ridge,

Lie loose on the bare turf, some half-o’ergrown

By the grey moss, but not a single stone

Unsettled by a wanton blow from foot

Of shepherd, man or boy. They have respect

For strangers who have travelled far perhaps,

For men who in such places, feeling there

The grandeur of the earth, have left inscribed

Their epitaph, which rain and snow

And the strong wind have reverenced.

But soon as Luke, full ten years old, could stand

Against the mountain blasts, and to the heights

Not fearing toil, nor length of weary ways,

He with his Father daily went, and they

Were as companions, why should I relate

That objects which the shepherd lov’d before

Were dearer now? that from the Boy there came

Feelings and emanations, things which were

Light to the sun and music to the wind;

And that the old man’s heart seem’d born again?

Thus in his Father’s sight the Boy grew up;

And now when he had reached his eighteenth year,

He was his comfort and his daily hope.

Though often thus industriously they passed[349]

Whole hours with but small interchange of speech,

Yet were there times in which they did not want

Discourse both wise and pleasant,[350] shrewd remarks

Of moral prudence,[351] clothed in images

Lively and beautiful, in rural forms,

That made their conversation fresh and fair

As is a landscape; and the shepherd oft

Would draw out of his heart the mysteries[352]

And admirations that were there, of God

And of his works: or, yielding to the bent

Of his peculiar humour, would let loose

His tongue, and give it the wind’s freedom; then,

Discoursing on remote imaginations, strong

Conceits, devices, plans, and schemes,[353]

Of alterations human hands might make

Among the mountains, fens which might be drained,

Mines opened, forests planted, and rocks split,

The fancies of a solitary man.[354]

Not with a waste of words, but for the sake

Of pleasure which I know that I shall give

To many living now, have I described

Old Michael’s manners and discourse, and thus

Minutely spoken of that aged Lamp

Round which the Shepherd and his household sate

—The light was famous in the neighbourhood

And was a public symbol …

Then follow four pages of Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journal (May 4th and 5th, 1802); and then, irregularly written, and with numerous erasures, the remainder of these unpublished lines.

… At length the boy

Said, “Father, ’tis lost labour; with your leave

I will go back and range a second time

The grounds which we have hunted through before.”

So saying, homeward, down the hill the boy

Sprang like a gust of wind: [and with a heart

Brimful of glory said within himself,

“I know where I shall find him, though the storm

Have driven him twenty miles.”

For ye must know][355] that though the storm

Drive one of those poor creatures miles and miles,

If he can crawl, he will return again

To his own hills, the spots where when a lamb

He learned to pasture at his mother’s side.

Bethinking him of this, again the boy

Pursued his way toward a brook, whose course

Was through that unfenced tract of mountain ground

Which to his father’s little farm belonged,

The home and ancient birthright of their flock.

Down the deep channel of the stream he went,

Prying through every nook. Meanwhile the rain

Began to fall upon the mountain tops,

Thick storm, and heavy, which for three hours’ space

Abated not; and all that time the boy

Was busy in his search, until at length

He spied the sheep upon a plot of grass,

An island in the brook. It was a place

Remote and deep, piled round with rocks, where foot

Of man or beast was seldom used to tread.

But now, when everywhere the summer grass

Began to fail, this sheep by hunger pressed

Had left his fellows, made his way alone

To the green plot of pasture in the brook.

Before the boy knew well what he had seen

He leapt upon the island, with proud heart,

And with a shepherd’s joy. Immediately

The sheep sprang forward to the further shore,

And was borne headlong by the roaring flood.

At this the boy looked round him, and his heart

Fainted with fear. Thrice did he turn his face

To either bank, nor could he summon up

The courage that was needful to leap back

’Cross the tempestuous torrent; so he stood

A prisoner on the island, not without

More than one thought of death, and his last hour.

Meantime the father had returned alone

To his own home, and now at the approach

Of evening he went forth to meet his son,

Nor could he guess the cause for which the boy

Had stayed so long. The shepherd took his way

Up his own mountain grounds, where, as he walked

Along the steep that overhung the brook,

He seemed to hear a voice, which was again

Repeated, like the whistling of a kite.

At this, not knowing why—as often-times

The old man afterwards was heard to say—

Down to the brook he went, and tracked its course

Upwards among the o’erhanging rocks; nor

Had he gone far ere he espied the boy

Right in the middle of the roaring stream.

Without distress or fear the shepherd heard

The outcry of his son: he stretched his staff

Towards him, bade him leap, which word scarce said

The boy was safe.…

Of Michael it is said—

No doubt if you in terms direct had asked

Whether he loved the mountains, true it is

That with blunt repetition of your words

He might have stared at you, and said that they

Were frightful to behold, but had you then

Discoursed with him …

Of his own business, and the goings on

Of earth and sky, then truly had you seen

That in his thoughts there were obscurities,

Wonder, and admiration, things that wrought

Not less than a religion in his heart.

And if it was his fortune to converse

With any who could talk of common things

In an unusual way, and give to them

Unusual aspects, or by questions apt

Wake sudden recognitions, that were like

Creations in the mind (and were indeed

Creations often), then when he discoursed

Of mountain sights, this untaught shepherd stood

Before the man with whom he so conversed

And looked at him as with a poet’s eye.

But speaking of the vale in which he dwelt,

And those bare rocks, if you had asked if he

For other pastures would exchange the same

And dwell elsewhere, …

… you then had seen

At once what spirit of love was in his heart.

I have related that this Shepherd loved

The fields and mountains, not alone for this

That from his very childhood he had lived

Among them, with a body hale and stout,

And with a vigorous mind …

… But exclude

Such reasons, and he had less cause to love

His native vale and patrimonial fields

Than others have, for Michael had liv’d on

Childless, until the time when he began

To look towards the shutting in of life.

In this MS. book there are also some of the original stanzas of Ruth, with a few variations of text.—Ed.

[345] Compare the first line of those Written with a Slate Pencil upon a Stone, the largest of a Heap lying near a deserted Quarry, upon one of the Islands at Rydal, vol. ii. p. 63.—Ed.

[346] Stone Arthur. See, in the “Poems on the Naming of Places,” the one beginning—

There is an Eminence,

Ed.

[347] Bottom is a common Cumbrian word for valley.—Ed.

[348] Armboth, on the western side of Thirlmere.—Ed.

[349] Though in these occupations they would pass†

[350] … prudent, …†

[351] Of daily Providence …†

[352] … obscurities†

[353] Day-dreams, thoughts, and schemes.†

† These variants occur in a letter of Dorothy Wordsworth to Thomas Poole.—Ed.

[354] All doubt as to these fragments being originally intended to form part of Michael is set at rest by a letter from Wordsworth to Thomas Poole, of Nether Stowey, written from Grasmere on the 9th of April 1801, in which he gives first some new lines to be added to Michael, at pp. 210 and 211 of vol. ii. of the “Lyrical Ballads” (ed. 1800); to which letter Dorothy Wordsworth added the postscript, “My brother has written the following lines, to be inserted page 206, after the ninth line—

Murmur as with the sound of summer flies;”

and then follow—

Though in these occupations they would pass

Whole hours, etc.

as printed above.

Dorothy Wordsworth adds, “Tell whether you think the insertion of these lines an improvement.”—Ed.

[355] An erased version.—Ed.