Beachy Head

By Charlotte Smith

ON thy stupendous summit, rock sublime !

That o'er the channel rear'd, half way at sea

The mariner at early morning hails,

I would recline; while Fancy should go forth,

And represent the strange and awful hour

Of vast concussion; when the Omnipotent

Stretch'd forth his arm, and rent the solid hills,

Bidding the impetuous main flood rush between

 

The rifted shores, and from the continent

Eternally divided this green isle.

Imperial lord of the high southern coast !

From thy projecting head-land I would mark

Far in the east the shades of night disperse,

Melting and thinned, as from the dark blue wave

Emerging, brilliant rays of arrowy light

Dart from the horizon; when the glorious sun

Just lifts above it his resplendent orb.

Advances now, with feathery silver touched,

The rippling tide of flood; glisten the sands,

While, inmates of the chalky clefts that scar

Thy sides precipitous, with shrill harsh cry,

Their white wings glancing in the level beam,

The terns, and gulls, and tarrocks, seek their food,

And thy rough hollows echo to the voice

 

Of the gray choughs, and ever restless daws,

With clamour, not unlike the chiding hounds,

While the lone shepherd, and his baying dog,

Drive to thy turfy crest his bleating flock.

The high meridian of the day is past,

And Ocean now, reflecting the calm Heaven,

Is of cerulean hue; and murmurs low

The tide of ebb, upon the level sands.

The sloop, her angular canvas shifting still,

Catches the light and variable airs

That but a little crisp the summer sea.

Dimpling its tranquil surface.

Afar off,

And just emerging from the arch immense

 

Where seem to part the elements, a fleet

Of fishing vessels stretch their lesser sails;

While more remote, and like a dubious spot

Just hanging in the horizon, laden deep,

The ship of commerce richly freighted, makes

Her slower progress, on her distant voyage,

Bound to the orient climates, where the sun

Matures the spice within its odorous shell,

And, rivalling the gray worm's filmy toil,

Bursts from its pod the vegetable down;

Which in long turban'd wreaths, from torrid heat

Defends the brows of Asia's countless casts.

There the Earth hides within her glowing breast

The beamy adamant, and the round pearl

Enchased in rugged covering; which the slave,

With perilous and breathless toil, tears off

 

From the rough sea-rock, deep beneath the waves.

These are the toys of Nature; and her sport

Of little estimate in Reason's eye:

And they who reason, with abhorrence see

Man, for such gaudes and baubles, violate

The sacred freedom of his fellow man­

Erroneous estimate ! As Heaven's pure air,

Fresh as it blows on this aërial height,

Or sound of seas upon the stony strand,

Or inland, the gay harmony of birds,

And winds that wander in the leafy woods;

Are to the unadulterate taste more worth

Than the elaborate harmony, brought out

From fretted stop, or modulated airs

Of vocal science.­So the brightest gems,

Glancing resplendent on the regal crown,

 

Or trembling in the high born beauty's ear,

Are poor and paltry, to the lovely light

Of the fair star, that as the day declines,

Attendant on her queen, the crescent moon,

Bathes her bright tresses in the eastern wave.

For now the sun is verging to the sea,

And as he westward sinks, the floating clouds

Suspended, move upon the evening gale,

And gathering round his orb, as if to shade

The insufferable brightness, they resign

Their gauzy whiteness; and more warm'd, assume

All hues of purple. There, transparent gold

Mingles with ruby tints, and sapphire gleams,

And colours, such as Nature through her works

Shews only in the ethereal canopy.

Thither aspiring Fancy fondly soars,

 

Wandering sublime thro' visionary vales,

Where bright pavilions rise, and trophies, fann'd

By airs celestial; and adorn'd with wreaths

Of flowers that bloom amid elysian bowers.

Now bright, and brighter still the colours glow,

Till half the lustrous orb within the flood

Seems to retire: the flood reflecting still

Its splendor, and in mimic glory drest;

Till the last ray shot upward, fires the clouds

With blazing crimson; then in paler light,

Long lines of tenderer radiance, lingering yield

To partial darkness; and on the opposing side

The early moon distinctly rising, throws

Her pearly brilliance on the trembling tide.

 

The fishermen, who at set seasons pass

Many a league off at sea their toiling night,

Now hail their comrades, from their daily task

Returning; and make ready for their own,

With the night tide commencing:­The night tide

Bears a dark vessel on, whose hull and sails

Mark her a coaster from the north. Her keel

Now ploughs the sand; and sidelong now she leans,

While with loud clamours her athletic crew

Unload her; and resounds the busy hum

Along the wave-worn rocks. Yet more remote,

Where the rough cliff hangs beetling o'er its base,

All breathes repose; the water's rippling sound

Scarce heard; but now and then the sea-snipe's cry

Just tells that something living is abroad;

And sometimes crossing on the moonbright line,

 

Glimmers the skiff, faintly discern'd awhile,

Then lost in shadow.

Contemplation here,

High on her throne of rock, aloof may sit,

And bid recording Memory unfold

Her scroll voluminous­bid her retrace

The period, when from Neustria's hostile shore

The Norman launch'd his galleys, and the bay

O'er which that mass of ruin frowns even now

In vain and sullen menace, then received

The new invaders; a proud martial race,

Of Scandinavia the undaunted sons,

Whom Dogon, Fier-a-bras, and Humfroi led

To conquest: while Trinacria to their power

Yielded her wheaten garland; and when thou,

 

Parthenope ! within thy fertile bay

Receiv'd the victors­

In the mailed ranks

Of Normans landing on the British coast

Rode Taillefer; and with astounding voice

Thunder'd the war song daring Roland sang

First in the fierce contention: vainly brave,

One not inglorious struggle England made­

But failing, saw the Saxon heptarchy

Finish for ever.­Then the holy pile,

Yet seen upon the field of conquest, rose,

Where to appease heaven's wrath for so much blood,

The conqueror bade unceasing prayers ascend,

And requiems for the slayers and the slain.

But let not modern Gallia form from hence

 

Presumptuous hopes, that ever thou again,

Queen of the isles ! shalt crouch to foreign arms.

The enervate sons of Italy may yield;

And the Iberian, all his trophies torn

And wrapp'd in Superstition's monkish weed,

May shelter his abasement, and put on

Degrading fetters. Never, never thou !

Imperial mistress of the obedient sea;

But thou, in thy integrity secure,

Shalt now undaunted meet a world in arms.

England ! 'twas where this promontory rears

Its rugged brow above the channel wave,

Parting the hostile nations, that thy fame,

Thy naval fame was tarnish'd, at what time

Thou, leagued with the Batavian, gavest to France

 

One day of triumph­triumph the more loud,

Because even then so rare. Oh ! well redeem'd,

Since, by a series of illustrious men,

Such as no other country ever rear'd,

To vindicate her cause. It is a list

Which, as Fame echoes it, blanches the cheek

Of bold Ambition; while the despot feels

The extorted sceptre tremble in his grasp.

From even the proudest roll by glory fill'd,

How gladly the reflecting mind returns

To simple scenes of peace and industry,

Where, bosom'd in some valley of the hills

Stands the lone farm; its gate with tawny ricks

Surrounded, and with granaries and sheds,

Roof'd with green mosses, and by elms and ash

 

Partially shaded; and not far remov'd

The hut of sea-flints built; the humble home

Of one, who sometimes watches on the heights,

When hid in the cold mist of passing clouds,

The flock, with dripping fleeces, are dispers'd

O'er the wide down; then from some ridged point

That overlooks the sea, his eager eye

Watches the bark that for his signal waits

To land its merchandize:­Quitting for this

Clandestine traffic his more honest toil,

The crook abandoning, he braves himself

The heaviest snow-storm of December's night,

When with conflicting winds the ocean raves,

And on the tossing boat, unfearing mounts

To meet the partners of the perilous trade,

And share their hazard. Well it were for him,

 

If no such commerce of destruction known,

He were content with what the earth affords

To human labour; even where she seems

Reluctant most. More happy is the hind,

Who, with his own hands rears on some black moor,

Or turbary, his independent hut

Cover'd with heather, whence the slow white smoke

Of smouldering peat arises­­A few sheep,

His best possession, with his children share

The rugged shed when wintry tempests blow;

But, when with Spring's return the green blades rise

Amid the russet heath, the household live

Joint tenants of the waste throughout the day,

And often, from her nest, among the swamps,

Where the gemm'd sun-dew grows, or fring'd buck-bean,

They scare the plover, that with plaintive cries

 

Flutters, as sorely wounded, down the wind.

Rude, and but just remov'd from savage life

Is the rough dweller among scenes like these,

(Scenes all unlike the poet's fabling dreams

Describing Arcady)­But he is free;

The dread that follows on illegal acts

He never feels; and his industrious mate

Shares in his labour. Where the brook is traced

By crouding osiers, and the black coot hides

Among the plashy reeds, her diving brood,

The matron wades; gathering the long green rush

That well prepar'd hereafter lends its light

To her poor cottage, dark and cheerless else

Thro' the drear hours of Winter. Otherwhile

She leads her infant group where charlock grows

"Unprofitably gay," or to the fields,

 

Where congregate the linnet and the finch,

That on the thistles, so profusely spread,

Feast in the desert; the poor family

Early resort, extirpating with care

These, and the gaudier mischief of the ground;

Then flames the high rais'd heap; seen afar off

Like hostile war-fires flashing to the sky.

Another task is theirs: On fields that shew

As angry Heaven had rain'd sterility,

Stony and cold, and hostile to the plough,

Where clamouring loud, the evening curlew runs

And drops her spotted eggs among the flints;

The mother and the children pile the stones

In rugged pyramids;­and all this toil

They patiently encounter; well content

On their flock bed to slumber undisturb'd

 

Beneath the smoky roof they call their own.

Oh ! little knows the sturdy hind, who stands

Gazing, with looks where envy and contempt

Are often strangely mingled, on the car

Where prosperous Fortune sits; what secret care

Or sick satiety is often hid,

Beneath the splendid outside: He knows not

How frequently the child of Luxury

Enjoying nothing, flies from place to place

In chase of pleasure that eludes his grasp;

And that content is e'en less found by him,

Than by the labourer, whose pick-axe smooths

The road before his chariot; and who doffs

What was an hat; and as the train pass on,

Thinks how one day's expenditure, like this,

 

Would cheer him for long months, when to his toil

The frozen earth closes her marble breast.

Ah ! who is happy ? Happiness ! a word

That like false fire, from marsh effluvia born,

Misleads the wanderer, destin'd to contend

In the world's wilderness, with want or woe­

Yet they are happy, who have never ask'd

What good or evil means. The boy

That on the river's margin gaily plays,

Has heard that Death is there­He knows not Death,

And therefore fears it not; and venturing in

He gains a bullrush, or a minnow­then,

At certain peril, for a worthless prize,

A crow's, or raven's nest, he climbs the boll,

 

Of some tall pine; and of his prowess proud,

Is for a moment happy. Are your cares,

Ye who despise him, never worse applied ?

The village girl is happy, who sets forth

To distant fair, gay in her Sunday suit,

With cherry colour'd knots, and flourish'd shawl,

And bonnet newly purchas'd. So is he

Her little brother, who his mimic drum

Beats, till he drowns her rural lovers' oaths

Of constant faith, and still increasing love;

Ah ! yet a while, and half those oaths believ'd,

Her happiness is vanish'd; and the boy

While yet a stripling, finds the sound he lov'd

Has led him on, till he has given up

His freedom, and his happiness together.

 

I once was happy, when while yet a child,

I learn'd to love these upland solitudes,

And, when elastic as the mountain air,

To my light spirit, care was yet unknown

And evil unforeseen:­Early it came,

And childhood scarcely passed, I was condemned,

A guiltless exile, silently to sigh,

While Memory, with faithful pencil, drew

The contrast; and regretting, I compar'd

With the polluted smoky atmosphere

And dark and stifling streets, the southern hills

That to the setting Sun, their graceful heads

Rearing, o'erlook the frith, where Vecta breaks

With her white rocks, the strong impetuous tide,

When western winds the vast Atlantic urge

To thunder on the coast­Haunts of my youth !

 

Scenes of fond day dreams, I behold ye yet !

Where 'twas so pleasant by thy northern slopes

To climb the winding sheep-path, aided oft

By scatter'd thorns: whose spiny branches bore

Small woolly tufts, spoils of the vagrant lamb

There seeking shelter from the noon-day sun;

And pleasant, seated on the short soft turf,

To look beneath upon the hollow way

While heavily upward mov'd the labouring wain,

And stalking slowly by, the sturdy hind

To ease his panting team, stopp'd with a stone

The grating wheel.

Advancing higher still

The prospect widens, and the village church

But little, o'er the lowly roofs around

 

Rears its gray belfry, and its simple vane;

Those lowly roofs of thatch are half conceal'd

By the rude arms of trees, lovely in spring,

When on each bough, the rosy-tinctur'd bloom

Sits thick, and promises autumnal plenty.

For even those orchards round the Norman farms,

Which, as their owners mark the promis'd fruit,

Console them for the vineyards of the south,

Surpass not these.

Where woods of ash, and beech,

And partial copses, fringe the green hill foot,

The upland shepherd rears his modest home,

There wanders by, a little nameless stream

That from the hill wells forth, bright now and clear,

Or after rain with chalky mixture gray,

 

But still refreshing in its shallow course,

The cottage garden; most for use design'd,

Yet not of beauty destitute. The vine

Mantles the little casement; yet the briar

Drops fragrant dew among the July flowers;

And pansies rayed, and freak'd and mottled pinks

Grow among balm, and rosemary and rue:

There honeysuckles flaunt, and roses blow

Almost uncultured: Some with dark green leaves

Contrast their flowers of pure unsullied white;

Others, like velvet robes of regal state

Of richest crimson, while in thorny moss

Enshrined and cradled, the most lovely, wear

The hues of youthful beauty's glowing cheek.­

With fond regret I recollect e'en now

In Spring and Summer, what delight I felt

 

Among these cottage gardens, and how much

Such artless nosegays, knotted with a rush

By village housewife or her ruddy maid,

Were welcome to me; soon and simply pleas'd.

An early worshipper at Nature's shrine;

I loved her rudest scenes­warrens, and heaths,

And yellow commons, and birch-shaded hollows,

And hedge rows, bordering unfrequented lanes

Bowered with wild roses, and the clasping woodbine

Where purple tassels of the tangling vetch

With bittersweet, and bryony inweave,

And the dew fills the silver bindweed's cups­

I loved to trace the brooks whose humid banks

Nourish the harebell, and the freckled pagil;

And stroll among o'ershadowing woods of beech,

 

Lending in Summer, from the heats of noon

A whispering shade; while haply there reclines

Some pensive lover of uncultur'd flowers,

Who, from the tumps with bright green mosses clad,

Plucks the wood sorrel, with its light thin leaves,

Heart-shaped, and triply folded; and its root

Creeping like beaded coral; or who there

Gathers, the copse's pride, anémones,

With rays like golden studs on ivory laid

Most delicate: but touch'd with purple clouds,

Fit crown for April's fair but changeful brow.

Ah ! hills so early loved ! in fancy still

I breathe your pure keen air; and still behold

Those widely spreading views, mocking alike

The Poet and the Painter's utmost art.

 

And still, observing objects more minute,

Wondering remark the strange and foreign forms

Of sea-shells; with the pale calcareous soil

Mingled, and seeming of resembling substance.

Tho' surely the blue Ocean (from the heights

Where the downs westward trend, but dimly seen)

Here never roll'd its surge. Does Nature then

Mimic, in wanton mood, fantastic shapes

Of bivalves, and inwreathed volutes, that cling

To the dark sea-rock of the wat'ry world ?

Or did this range of chalky mountains, once

Form a vast bason, where the Ocean waves

Swell'd fathomless ? What time these fossil shells,

Buoy'd on their native element, were thrown

Among the imbedding calx: when the huge hill

Its giant bulk heaved, and in strange ferment

 

Grew up a guardian barrier, 'twixt the sea

And the green level of the sylvan weald.

Ah ! very vain is Science' proudest boast,

And but a little light its flame yet lends

To its most ardent votaries; since from whence

These fossil forms are seen, is but conjecture,

Food for vague theories, or vain dispute,

While to his daily task the peasant goes,

Unheeding such inquiry; with no care

But that the kindly change of sun and shower,

Fit for his toil the earth he cultivates.

As little recks the herdsman of the hill,

Who on some turfy knoll, idly reclined,

Watches his wether flock; that deep beneath

Rest the remains of men, of whom is left

 

No traces in the records of mankind,

Save what these half obliterated mounds

And half fill'd trenches doubtfully impart

To some lone antiquary; who on times remote,

Since which two thousand years have roll'd away,

Loves to contemplate. He perhaps may trace,

Or fancy he can trace, the oblong square

Where the mail'd legions, under Claudius, rear'd,

The rampire, or excavated fossé delved;

What time the huge unwieldy Elephant

Auxiliary reluctant, hither led,

From Afric's forest glooms and tawny sands,

First felt the Northern blast, and his vast frame

Sunk useless; whence in after ages found,

The wondering hinds, on those enormous bones

Gaz'd; and in giants dwelling on the hills

Believed and marvell'd­

 

Hither, Ambition, come !

Come and behold the nothingness of all

For which you carry thro' the oppressed Earth,

War, and its train of horrors­see where tread

The innumerous hoofs of flocks above the works

By which the warrior sought to register

His glory, and immortalize his name­

The pirate Dane, who from his circular camp

Bore in destructive robbery, fire and sword

Down thro' the vale, sleeps unremember'd here;

And here, beneath the green sward, rests alike

The savage native, who his acorn meal

Shar'd with the herds, that ranged the pathless woods;

And the centurion, who on these wide hills

Encamping, planted the Imperial Eagle.

All, with the lapse of Time, have passed away,

 

Even as the clouds, with dark and dragon shapes,

Or like vast promontories crown'd with towers,

Cast their broad shadows on the downs: then sail

Far to the northward, and their transient gloom

Is soon forgotten.

But from thoughts like these,

By human crimes suggested, let us turn

To where a more attractive study courts

The wanderer of the hills; while shepherd girls

Will from among the fescue bring him flowers,

Of wonderous mockery; some resembling bees

In velvet vest, intent on their sweet toil,

While others mimic flies, that lightly sport

In the green shade, or float along the pool,

But here seem perch'd upon the slender stalk,

 

And gathering honey dew. While in the breeze

That wafts the thistle's plumed seed along,

Blue bells wave tremulous. The mountain thyme

Purples the hassock of the heaving mole,

And the short turf is gay with tormentil,

And bird's foot trefoil, and the lesser tribes

Of hawkweed; spangling it with fringed stars.­

Near where a richer tract of cultur'd land

Slopes to the south; and burnished by the sun,

Bend in the gale of August, floods of corn;

The guardian of the flock, with watchful care,

Repels by voice and dog the encroaching sheep­

While his boy visits every wired trap

That scars the turf; and from the pit-falls takes

The timid migrants, who from distant wilds,

Warrens, and stone quarries, are destined thus

 

To lose their short existence. But unsought

By Luxury yet, the Shepherd still protects

The social bird, who from his native haunts

Of willowy current, or the rushy pool,

Follows the fleecy croud, and flirts and skims,

In fellowship among them.

Where the knoll

More elevated takes the changeful winds,

The windmill rears its vanes; and thitherward

With his white load, the master travelling,

Scares the rooks rising slow on whispering wings,

While o'er his head, before the summer sun

Lights up the blue expanse, heard more than seen,

The lark sings matins; and above the clouds

Floating, embathes his spotted breast in dew.

 

Beneath the shadow of a gnarled thorn,

Bent by the sea blast, from a seat of turf

With fairy nosegays strewn, how wide the view !

Till in the distant north it melts away,

And mingles indiscriminate with clouds:

But if the eye could reach so far, the mart

Of England's capital, its domes and spires

Might be perceived­Yet hence the distant range

Of Kentish hills, appear in purple haze;

And nearer, undulate the wooded heights,

And airy summits, that above the mole

Rise in green beauty; and the beacon'd ridge

Of Black-down shagg'd with heath, and swelling rude

Like a dark island from the vale; its brow

Catching the last rays of the evening sun

That gleam between the nearer park's old oaks,

 

Then lighten up the river, and make prominent

The portal, and the ruin'd battlements

Of that dismantled fortress; rais'd what time

The Conqueror's successors fiercely fought,

Tearing with civil feuds the desolate land.

But now a tiller of the soil dwells there,

And of the turret's loop'd and rafter'd halls

Has made an humbler homestead­Where he sees,

Instead of armed foemen, herds that graze

Along his yellow meadows; or his flocks

At evening from the upland driv'n to fold­

In such a castellated mansion once

A stranger chose his home; and where hard by

In rude disorder fallen, and hid with brushwood

Lay fragments gray of towers and buttresses,

 

Among the ruins, often he would muse­

His rustic meal soon ended, he was wont

To wander forth, listening the evening sounds

Of rushing milldam, or the distant team,

Or night-jar, chasing fern-flies: the tir'd hind

Pass'd him at nightfall, wondering he should sit

On the hill top so late: they from the coast

Who sought bye paths with their clandestine load,

Saw with suspicious doubt, the lonely man

Cross on their way: but village maidens thought

His senses injur'd; and with pity say

That he, poor youth ! must have been cross'd in love­

For often, stretch'd upon the mountain turf

With folded arms, and eyes intently fix'd

Where ancient elms and firs obscured a grange,

Some little space within the vale below,

 

They heard him, as complaining of his fate,

And to the murmuring wind, of cold neglect

And baffled hope he told.­The peasant girls

These plaintive sounds remember, and even now

Among them may be heard the stranger's songs.

Were I a Shepherd on the hill

And ever as the mists withdrew

Could see the willows of the rill

Shading the footway to the mill

Where once I walk'd with you­

 

And as away Night's shadows sail,

And sounds of birds and brooks arise,

Believe, that from the woody vale

I hear your voice upon the gale

In soothing melodies;

And viewing from the Alpine height,

The prospect dress'd in hues of air,

Could say, while transient colours bright

Touch'd the fair scene with dewy light,

'Tis, that her eyes are there !

I think, I could endure my lot

And linger on a few short years,

And then, by all but you forgot,

Sleep, where the turf that clothes the spot

May claim some pitying tears.

 

For 'tis not easy to forget

One, who thro' life has lov'd you still,

And you, however late, might yet

With sighs to Memory giv'n, regret

The Shepherd of the Hill.

Yet otherwhile it seem'd as if young Hope

Her flattering pencil gave to Fancy's hand,

And in his wanderings, rear'd to sooth his soul

Ideal bowers of pleasure­Then, of Solitude

And of his hermit life, still more enamour'd,

His home was in the forest; and wild fruits

 

And bread sustain'd him. There in early spring

The Barkmen found him, e'er the sun arose;

There at their daily toil, the Wedgecutters

Beheld him thro' the distant thicket move.

The shaggy dog following the truffle hunter,

Bark'd at the loiterer; and perchance at night

Belated villagers from fair or wake,

While the fresh night-wind let the moonbeams in

Between the swaying boughs, just saw him pass,

And then in silence, gliding like a ghost

He vanish'd ! Lost among the deepening gloom.­

But near one ancient tree, whose wreathed roots

Form'd a rude couch, love-songs and scatter'd rhymes,

Unfinish'd sentences, or half erased,

And rhapsodies like this, were sometimes found­

­­­­­­

 

Let us to woodland wilds repair

While yet the glittering night-dews seem

To wait the freshly-breathing air,

Precursive of the morning beam,

That rising with advancing day,

Scatters the silver drops away.

An elm, uprooted by the storm,

The trunk with mosses gray and green,

Shall make for us a rustic form,

Where lighter grows the forest scene;

And far among the bowery shades,

Are ferny lawns and grassy glades.

 

Retiring May to lovely June

Her latest garland now resigns;

The banks with cuckoo-flowers are strewn,

The woodwalks blue with columbines,

And with its reeds, the wandering stream

Reflects the flag-flower's golden gleam.

There, feathering down the turf to meet,

Their shadowy arms the beeches spread,

While high above our sylvan seat,

Lifts the light ash its airy head;

And later leaved, the oaks between

Extend their bows of vernal green.

 

The slender birch its paper rind

Seems offering to divided love,

And shuddering even without a wind

Aspins, their paler foliage move,

As if some spirit of the air

Breath'd a low sigh in passing there.

The Squirrel in his frolic mood,

Will fearless bound among the boughs;

Yaffils laugh loudly thro' the wood,

And murmuring ring-doves tell their vows;

While we, as sweetest woodscents rise,

Listen to woodland melodies.

 

And I'll contrive a sylvan room

Against the time of summer heat,

Where leaves, inwoven in Nature's loom,

Shall canopy our green retreat;

And gales that "close the eye of day"

Shall linger, e'er they die away.

And when a sear and sallow hue

From early frost the bower receives,

I'll dress the sand rock cave for you,

And strew the floor with heath and leaves,

That you, against the autumnal air

May find securer shelter there.

 

The Nightingale will then have ceas'd

To sing her moonlight serenade;

But the gay bird with blushing breast,

And Woodlarks still will haunt the shade,

And by the borders of the spring

Reed-wrens will yet be carolling.

The forest hermit's lonely cave

None but such soothing sounds shall reach,

Or hardly heard, the distant wave

Slow breaking on the stony beach;

Or winds, that now sigh soft and low,

Now make wild music as they blow.

 

And then, before the chilling North

The tawny foliage falling light,

Seems, as it flits along the earth,

The footfall of the busy Sprite,

Who wrapt in pale autumnal gloom,

Calls up the mist-born Mushroom.

Oh ! could I hear your soft voice there,

And see you in the forest green

All beauteous as you are, more fair

You'ld look, amid the sylvan scene,

And in a wood-girl's simple guise,

Be still more lovely in mine eyes.

 

Ye phantoms of unreal delight,

Visions of fond delirium born !

Rise not on my deluded sight,

Then leave me drooping and forlorn

To know, such bliss can never be,

Unless loved like me.

The visionary, nursing dreams like these,

Is not indeed unhappy. Summer woods

Wave over him, and whisper as they wave,

Some future blessings he may yet enjoy.

And as above him sail the silver clouds,

He follows them in thought to distant climes,

Where, far from the cold policy of this,

 

Dividing him from her he fondly loves,

He, in some island of the southern sea,

May haply build his cane-constructed bower

Beneath the bread-fruit, or aspiring palm,

With long green foliage rippling in the gale.

Oh ! let him cherish his ideal bliss­

For what is life, when Hope has ceas'd to strew

Her fragile flowers along its thorny way ?

And sad and gloomy are his days, who lives

Of Hope abandon'd !

Just beneath the rock

Where Beachy overpeers the channel wave,

Within a cavern mined by wintry tides

Dwelt one, who long disgusted with the world

And all its ways, appear'd to suffer life

 

Rather than live; the soul-reviving gale,

Fanning the bean-field, or the thymy heath,

Had not for many summers breathed on him;

And nothing mark'd to him the season's change,

Save that more gently rose the placid sea,

And that the birds which winter on the coast

Gave place to other migrants; save that the fog,

Hovering no more above the beetling cliffs

Betray'd not then the little careless sheep

On the brink grazing, while their headlong fall

Near the lone Hermit's flint-surrounded home,

Claim'd unavailing pity; for his heart

Was feelingly alive to all that breath'd;

And outraged as he was, in sanguine youth,

By human crimes, he still acutely felt

For human misery.

 

Wandering on the beach,

He learn'd to augur from the clouds of heaven,

And from the changing colours of the sea,

And sullen murmurs of the hollow cliffs,

Or the dark porpoises, that near the shore

Gambol'd and sported on the level brine

When tempests were approaching: then at night

He listen'd to the wind; and as it drove

The billows with o'erwhelming vehemence

He, starting from his rugged couch, went forth

And hazarding a life, too valueless,

He waded thro' the waves, with plank or pole

Towards where the mariner in conflict dread

Was buffeting for life the roaring surge;

And now just seen, now lost in foaming gulphs,

The dismal gleaming of the clouded moon

 

Shew'd the dire peril. Often he had snatch'd

From the wild billows, some unhappy man

Who liv'd to bless the hermit of the rocks.

But if his generous cares were all in vain,

And with slow swell the tide of morning bore

Some blue swol'n cor'se to land; the pale recluse

Dug in the chalk a sepulchre­above

Where the dank sea-wrack mark'd the utmost tide,

And with his prayers perform'd the obsequies

For the poor helpless stranger.

One dark night

The equinoctial wind blew south by west,

Fierce on the shore; ­the bellowing cliffs were shook

Even to their stony base, and fragments fell

Flashing and thundering on the angry flood.

 

At day-break, anxious for the lonely man,

His cave the mountain shepherds visited,

Tho' sand and banks of weeds had choak'd their way­

He was not in it; but his drowned cor'se

By the waves wafted, near his former home

Receiv'd the rites of burial. Those who read

Chisel'd within the rock, these mournful lines,

Memorials of his sufferings, did not grieve,

That dying in the cause of charity

His spirit, from its earthly bondage freed,

Had to some better region fled for ever.