Wild Flowers - Or, Pastoral and Local Poetry by Robert Bloomfield
page 34 of 76 (44%)
page 34 of 76 (44%)
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The winding vale from what it was of yore,
Than e'en mortality in all its rage, And all the change of faces in an age. The Tale pursued. "Warmth," will they term it, that I speak so free? They strip thy shades,--thy shades so dear to me! In Herbert's days woods cloth'd both hill and dale; But peace, Remembrance! let us tell the tale. His home was in the valley, elms grew round His moated mansion, and the pleasant sound Of woodland birds that loud at day-break sing, With the first cuckoos that proclaim the spring, Flock'd round his dwelling; and his kitchen smoke, That from the towering rookery upward broke, Of joyful import to the poor hard by, Stream'd a glad sign of hospitality; So fancy pictures; but its day is o'er; The moat remains, the dwelling is no more! Its name denotes its melancholy fall, For village children call the spot "Burnt-Hall." [Illustration: a woman kneeling.] The Church. But where's the maid, who in the meadow-way Met Herbert Brooks amongst the new-mown hay? |
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