II. A WHIRL-BLAST from behind the hill Rushed o'er the wood with startling sound : Then-all at once the air was still, And showers of hailstones pattered round. Where leafless Oaks towered high above, I sat within an undergrove Of tallest hollies, tall and green; A fairer bower was never seen. From year to year the spacious floor With withered leaves is covered o'er, You could not lay a hair between : And all the year the bower is green. But see! where'er the hailstones drop The withered leaves all skip and hop, There's not a breeze-no breath of airYet here, and there, and every where Along the floor, beneath the shade VOL. I. R III. "WITH how sad steps, O Moon thou climb'st the sky, What strife would then be yours, fair Creatures, driven * From a sonnet of Sir Philip Sydney. IV. THE GREEN LINNET. BENEATH these fruit-tree boughs that shed In this sequestered nook how sweet One have I marked, the happiest Guest Hail to Thee, far above the rest R2 While Birds, and Butterflies, and Flowers Make all one Band of Paramours, Thou, ranging up and down the bowers, Art sole in thy employment; A Life, a Presence like the Air, Scattering thy gladness without care, Thyself thy own enjoyment. Upon yon tuft of hazel trees, Behold him perched in ecstasies, Yet seeming still to hover; There! where the flutter of his wings Shadows and sunny glimmerings, That cover him all over. While thus before my eyes he gleams, When in a moment forth he teems His little song in gushes: As if it pleased him to disdain And mock the Form which he did feign, While he was dancing with the train Of Leaves among the bushes. |