[FK] "Almost immediately after leaving Birks Brig the stream plunges into a gorge—the 'deep-worn channel' of this sonnet. By dint of a little clambering, all the picturesque features described in the sonnet may be seen, but the traveller is forced at last to resume the road. The channel is so deep and confined that the stream cannot be seen from the road, and this is the first time since leaving the source that the Duddon is lost to sight. It is this fact which gives rise to the concluding lines of the sonnet:—

Turn from the sight, enamoured Muse—we must;

And, if thou canst, leave them without regret!"

(Herbert Rix.)


XIII
OPEN PROSPECT[FL]

Hail to the fields—with Dwellings sprinkled o'er,

And one small hamlet, under a green hill

Clustering,[444] with barn and byre, and spouting mill!

A glance suffices;—should we wish for more,