Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery |
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Page 26
... make Her fearless to disclose . And oft she hinted , if a crime , Through ignorance beguil'd- Not to conceal the crime in fear , For none should wrong her child : Or , if the rose that left her cheek Was 26 THE FATE OF AMY .
... make Her fearless to disclose . And oft she hinted , if a crime , Through ignorance beguil'd- Not to conceal the crime in fear , For none should wrong her child : Or , if the rose that left her cheek Was 26 THE FATE OF AMY .
Page 27
... Fear God , my child ! " she oft would say , " And you may hope for ease . " And still she pray'd , and still had hopes There was no injury done ; And still advis'd the ruin'd girl , The world's deceit to shun . And many a cautionary ...
... Fear God , my child ! " she oft would say , " And you may hope for ease . " And still she pray'd , and still had hopes There was no injury done ; And still advis'd the ruin'd girl , The world's deceit to shun . And many a cautionary ...
Page 30
... fear the sun , But come in open view . Now buzzing , with unwelcome din , The heedless beetle bangs Against the cow - boy's dinner tin , That o'er his shoulder hangs . And on he keeps in heedless pat , Till , quite enrag'd , the boy ...
... fear the sun , But come in open view . Now buzzing , with unwelcome din , The heedless beetle bangs Against the cow - boy's dinner tin , That o'er his shoulder hangs . And on he keeps in heedless pat , Till , quite enrag'd , the boy ...
Page 31
... fear ; For in a moment they will part , If aught approaches near . The owls mope out , and scouting bats Begin their giddy round ; While countless swarms of dancing gnats Each water - pudge surround . And ' side yon pool , as smooth as ...
... fear ; For in a moment they will part , If aught approaches near . The owls mope out , and scouting bats Begin their giddy round ; While countless swarms of dancing gnats Each water - pudge surround . And ' side yon pool , as smooth as ...
Page 41
... Just so ' twill fare with me in Autumn's Life ; Just so I'd wish : but may the trunk and all Die with the leaves ; nor taste that wintry strife , When sorrows urge , and fear impedes the fall . THE ROBIN . Now the snow hides the ground , ...
... Just so ' twill fare with me in Autumn's Life ; Just so I'd wish : but may the trunk and all Die with the leaves ; nor taste that wintry strife , When sorrows urge , and fear impedes the fall . THE ROBIN . Now the snow hides the ground , ...
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Common terms and phrases
adieu beauty beauty's beetle beneath bevering birds blest bloom bough brambles breast bush charms Cheapside cheek CLARE cottage creep daisies dark dear delight Dict dithering doom'd early rising fair Fancy fate fear flower fond genius grass grave green Hail happy heaps heart Helpstone hide hope hour humble JOHN CLARE joys justice forces labour last shilling leave lost love thee love's lowly maidens Mary meet mind morning Muse ne'er neath neighbours never nigh night nosegay o'er on't once pain Patty peep plain Poems Poesy poets poor Poverty pride raptures rest Reynard river Gwash rose round rural scene scorn shade sigh sleep smiles snow song Sonnet soul spot Spring's summer swain sweet sweetly tell thine thou thou'rt thought toil tree twas twill vainly village warm weary wild wind winter's wish wood ye dear
Popular passages
Page xxviii - Why, let the stricken deer go weep, The hart ungalled play ; For some must watch, while some must sleep : Thus runs the world away.
Page xx - Seasons does not contain a single new image of external nature ; and scarcely presents a familiar one from which it can be inferred that the eye of the Poet had been steadily fixed upon his object, much less that his feelings had urged him to work upon it in the spirit of genuine imagination.
Page 69 - ALL how silent and how still, Nothing heard but yonder mill ; While the dazzled eye surveys All around a liquid blaze ; And amid the scorching gleams, If we earnest look, it seems As if crooked bits of glass Seem'd repeatedly to pass.
Page 141 - And hear the beetle sound his horn ; And hear the skylark whistling nigh, Sprung from his bed of tufted corn, A hailing minstrel in the sky.
Page 201 - Approach of Spring. Sweet are the omens of approaching Spring When gay the elder sprouts her winged leaves ; When tootling robins carol-welcomes sing, And sparrows chelp glad tidings from the eaves. What lovely prospects wait each wakening hour, When each new day some novelty displays, How sweet the sun-beam melts the crocus flower, Whose...
Page 149 - ... beauties of a daisy's face ; Oft will he witness, with admiring eyes, The brook's sweet dimples o'er the pebbles rise ; And often bent, as o'er some magic spell, He'll pause and pick his shaped stone and shell : Raptures the while his inward powers inflame, And joys delight him which he cannot name ; Ideas picture pleasing views to mind, For which his language can no utterance find...
Page 188 - WELCOME, pale Primrose ! starting up between Dead matted leaves of ash and oak, that strew The every lawn, the wood, and spinney through, Mid creeping moss and ivy's darker green ; How much thy presence beautifies the ground : How sweet thy modest, unaffected pride Glows on the sunny bank, and wood's warm side. And where thy fairy flowers in groups are found...
Page 11 - And prints its image on my wrinkl'd cheeks Those charms of youth that I again may see May it be mine to meet my end in thee And as reward for all my troubles past Find one hope true to die at home at last...
Page 47 - s in vain to keep him warm. Poverty must brave the storm, Friendship none its aid to lend, Constant health his only friend, Granting leave to live in pain, Giving strength to toil in vain.
Page ix - Toiling in the naked fields, Where no bush a shelter yields, Needy Labour dithering stands, Beats and blows his numbing hands ; And upon the crumping snows Stamps, in vain, to warm his toes.