‘The flowres and the greves like hie.’
The daisy flowers are as high as the groves!
Wordsworth retained the
groves, but refused to make daisies of
equal height with them.
’Tall were the flowers,
the grove a lofty cover,
All green and white; and nothing
else was seen.’”
(Professor Dowden, in the ‘Transactions of the Wordsworth Society’. No. III.)—Ed.]
[Footnote D:
“In Chaucer’s poem, after
‘the cuckoo, bird unholy,’ has said his
evil
say, the Nightingale breaks forth ‘so
lustily,’
’That with her clere
voys she made rynge
Thro out alle the grene wode
wide,’
Wordsworth has taken a poet’s licence with these lines:
’I heard the lusty Nightingale
so sing,
That her clear voice made
‘a loud rioting’,
Echoing through all the green
wood wide.’
This ‘loud rioting’ is Wordsworth’s,
not Chaucer’s; and it belongs, as
it were, to that other passage of his:
’O Nightingale, thou
surely art
A creature of a fiery heart,
These notes of thine—they
pierce and pierce;
Tumultuous harmony and fierce!
Thou sing’st as if the
God of wine
Had helped thee to a Valentine.’”
(Professor Dowden, in the ‘Transactions of the Wordsworth Society’, No. III.)—Ed.]
[Footnote E: From a manuscript in the Bodleian, as are also stanzas 44 and 45—W. W.
(1841), which are necessary to complete the sense—W. W. (added in 1842).]
* * * * *
TROILUS AND CRESIDA
Translated 1801.—Published 1841 [A]
Next morning Troilus began to clear
His eyes from sleep, at the first break
of day,
And unto Pandarus, his own Brother dear,
For love of God, full piteously did say,
We must the Palace see of Cresida;
5
For since we yet may have no other feast,
Let us behold her Palace at the least!
And therewithal to cover his intent
A cause he found into the Town to go,
[B]
And they right forth to Cresid’s
Palace went; 10
But, Lord, this simple Troilus was woe,
Him thought his sorrowful heart would
break [1] in two;
For when he saw her doors fast bolted
all,
Well nigh for sorrow down he ’gan
to fall.
Therewith when this true Lover ’gan
behold, 15
How shut was every window of the place,
Like frost he thought his heart was icy
cold;
For which, with changed, pale, and deadly
face,
Without word uttered, forth he ’gan
to pace;
And on his purpose bent so fast to ride,
20
That no wight his continuance espied.
[C]
Then said he thus,—O Palace
desolate!
O house of houses, once so richly dight!
O Palace empty and disconsolate!
Thou lamp of which extinguished is the
light; 25
O Palace whilom day that now art night,
Thou ought’st to fall and I to die;
since she
Is gone who held us both in sovereignty.