Poems, &c. (1790) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 81 pages of information about Poems, &c. (1790).

Poems, &c. (1790) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 81 pages of information about Poems, &c. (1790).

Heavy and slow so pass the mid-day hours,
Till gently bending on the ridge’s top,
The heavy seeded grass begins to wave,
And the high branches of the slender poplar
Shiver aloft in air their rustling leaves. 
Cool breaths the rising breeze, and with it wakes
The worn out spirit from its state of stupor. 
The lazy boy springs from his mossy bed,
To chace the gaudy tempting butterfly,
Who spreading on the grass its mealy wings,
Oft lights within his reach, e’en at his seer,
Yet still eludes his grasp, and o’er his head
Light hov’ring round, or mounted high in air
Temps his young eye, and wearies out his limbs. 
The drouzy dog, who feels the kindly breeze
That passing o’er him, lifts his shaggy ear,
Begins to stretch him, on his legs half-rais’d,
Till fully wak’d, with bristling cock’d-up tail,
He makes the village echo to his bark.

But let us not forget the busy maid
Who, by the side of the clear pebly stream,
Spreads out her snowy linens to the sun,
And sheds with lib’ral hand the chrystal show’r
O’er many a fav’rite piece of fair attire,
Revolving in her mind her gay appearance
In all this dress, at some approaching fair. 
The dimpling half-check’d smile, and mutt’ring lip
Betray the secret workings of her fancy,
And flattering thoughts of the complacent mind. 
There little vagrant bands of truant boys
Amongst the bushes try their harmless tricks;
Whilst some a sporting in the shallow stream
Toss up the lashing water round their heads,
Or strive with wily art to catch the trout,
Or ’twixt their fingers grasp the slipp’ry eel. 
The shepherd-boy sits singing on the bank,
To pass away the weary lonely hours,
Weaving with art his little crown of rushes,
A guiltless easy crown that brings no care,
Which having made he places on his head,
And leaps and skips about, and bawls full loud
To some companion, lonely as himself,
Far in the distant field; or else delighted
To hear the echo’d sound of his own voice
Returning answer from the neighboring rock,
Holds no unpleasing converse with himself.

Now weary labourers perceive, well-pleas’d,
The shadows lengthen, and th’ oppressive day
With all its toil fast wearing to an end. 
The sun, far in the west, with side-long beam
Plays on the yellow head of the round hay-cock,
And fields are checker’d with fantastic shapes
Or tree, or shrub, or gate, or rugged stone,
All lengthen’d out, in antic disproportion,
Upon the darken’d grass.——­
They finish out their long and toilsome talk. 
Then, gathering up their rakes and scatter’d coats,
With the less cumb’rous fragments of their feast,
Return right gladly to their peaceful homes.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Poems, &c. (1790) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.