The corn rustles on the margin where the sandy soil
ceases; the sleepy farmhouses seem to ’give
you a lazy greeting, and the figures of the labourers
are like natural features of the landscape. Everything
appears friendly; it may be that the feeling of kindness
and security arises from your physical well-being,
but it is there all the same, and what can you do more
than enjoy? Perhaps in the midst of your confused
happiness your mind begins acting on its own account,
and quite disregards its humble companion, the body.
Xavier de Maistre’s mind always did so, and left
what Xavier called the poor
bete of a carcass
to take care of itself; and all of us have to experience
this double existence at times. Then you find
the advantages of knowing a great deal of poetry.
I would not give a rush for a man who merely pores
over his poets in order to make notes or comments
on them; you ought to have them as beloved companions
to be near you night and day, to take up the parable
when your own independent thought is hazy with delight
or even with sorrow. As you tramp along the whistling
stretches amid the blaze of the ragworts and the tender
passing glances of the wild veronica, you can take
in all their loveliness with the eye, while the brain
goes on adding to your pleasure by recalling the music
of the poets. Perhaps you fall into step with
the quiver and beat of our British Homer’s rushing
rhymes, and Marmion thunders over the brown hills
of the Border, or Clara lingers where mingles war’s
rattle with groans of the dying. Perhaps the wilful
brain persists in crooning over the “Belle Dame
Sans Merci;” your mood flutters and changes
with every minute, and you derive equal satisfaction
from the organ-roll of Milton or the silvery flageolet
tones of Thomas Moore. If culture consists in
learning the grammar an etymologies of a poet’s
song, then no cultured man will ever get any pleasure
from poetry while he is on a walking tour; but, if
you absorb your poets into your being, you have spells
of rare and unexpected delight.
The halt is always pleasant. On our sand-hills
the brackens grow to an immense height, and, if you
lie down among them, you are surrounded by a pale
green gleam, as if you had dived beneath some lucent
sun-smitten water. The ground-lark sways on a
frond above you; the stonechat lights for an instant,
utters his cracking cry, and is off with a whisk; you
have fair, quiet, and sweet rest, and you start up
ready to jog along again. You come to a slow
clear stream that winds seaward, lilting to itself
in low whispered cadences. Over some broad shallow
pool paven with brown stones the little trout fly
hither and thither, making a weft and woof of dark
streaks as they travel; the minnows poise themselves,
and shiver and dart convulsively; the leisurely eel
undulates along, and perhaps gives you a glint of
his wicked eye; you begin to understand the angler’s
fascination, for the most restive of men might be lulled
by the light moan of that wimpling current. Cruel?
Alas, yes!