The Banks of Wye by Robert Bloomfield
page 65 of 71 (91%)
page 65 of 71 (91%)
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And sent me back to school; for then,
Ere yet I learn'd to wield the pen; The pen that should all crimes assail, The pen that leads to fame--or jail; Then steem'd the malt, whose spirit bears The frosts and suns of thirty years! Through LEDBURY, at decline of day, The wheels that bore us, roll'd away, To cross the MALVERN HILLS. 'Twas night; Alternate met the weary sight Each steep, dark, undulating brow, And WORC'STER'S gloomy vale below: Gloomy no more, when eastward sprung The light that gladdens heart and tongue; When morn glanc'd o'er the shepherd's bed, And cast her tints of lovely red Wide o'er the vast expanding scene, And mix'd her hues with mountain green; Then, gazing from a height so fair, Through miles of unpolluted air, Where cultivation triumphs wide, O'er boundless views on every side, Thick planted towns, where toils ne'er cease, And far-spread silent village peace, As each succeeding pleasure came, The heart acknowledg'd MALVERN'S fame. Oft glancing thence to Cambria still, Thou yet wert seen, my fav'rite hill, |
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