"Her divine skill taught me this, Than all Nature's beauties can In some other wiser man.” G. WITHERS. IN youth from rock to rock I went, From hill to hill, in discontent Of pleasure high and turbulent, Most pleased when most uneasy; But now my own delights I make,— * His Muse. When soothed a while by milder airs, That thinly shades his few grey hairs; Whole summer fields are thine by right; In shoals and bands, a morrice train, Thou greet'st the Traveller in the lane; If welcom❜d once thou count'st it gain; Thou art not daunted, Nor car'st if thou be set at naught: And oft alone in nooks remote We meet thee, like a pleasant thought, When such are wanted. Be Violets in their secret mews The flowers the wanton Zephyrs choose; Proud be the Rose, with rains and dews` Her head impearling ; Thou liv'st with less ambitious aim, Yet hast not gone without thy fame; Thou art indeed by many a claim The Poet's darling. If to a rock from rains he fly, Near the green holly, And wearily at length should fare; Thou art!- --a Friend at hand, to scare A hundred times, by rock or bower, Ere thus I have lain couched an hour, Have I derived from thy sweet power Some apprehension; Some steady love; some brief delight; Some memory that had taken flight; Some chime of fancy wrong or right; Or stray invention. If stately passions in me burn, And one chance look to Thee should turn, I drink out of an humbler urn A lowlier pleasure; The homely sympathy that heeds The common life, our nature breeds; A wisdom fitted to the needs Of hearts at leisure. When, smitten by the morning ray, I see thee rise alert and gay, Then, cheerful Flower! my spirits play And when, at dusk, by dews opprest Hath often eased my pensive breast And all day long I number yet, An instinct call it, a blind sense; A happy, genial influence, Coming one knows not how nor whence, Child of the Year! that round dost run Thy course, bold lover of the sun, And cheerful when the day's begun As morning Leveret, *Thy long-lost praise thou shalt regain; Dear shalt thou be to future men As in old time;-thou not in vain, Art Nature's Favorite. * See, in Chaucer and the elder Poets, the honours formerly paid to this flower. |